| |||||||
| The Flower Mill Best ways to grow non-edibles |
![]() |
| | LinkBack | Thread Tools | Display Modes |
| ||||
| Quote:
![]() Seriously, anything planted in heavy clay last November had little chance to get established before the utterly foul winter we've endured. the plants will have been waterlogged, frozen and with any luck, wind scorched as well. At least it wasn't anything decent (Jeanie has already warned you not to expect sympathy for this particular weed) but sorry if you paid good money for big trees and went to the trouble of planting them. Unless of course, you've started this thread just to wind us up! |
| ||||
| A sprinkling of blood, fish and bone won't do them any harm, but with the weather we've had this winter they've certainly had a struggle since planting, haven't they. They will probably perk up when the weather improves. Or should that be 'IF' . Incidentally, if they are the golden Leyland Cypress they will usually grow back if you cut back into the wood, whereas the green variety will not.Personally, I'd have planted Photinia x fraseri 'Red Robin' instead for a feature hedge, or one of the many other lovely hedging shrubs available in this country, or even a mixed native hedge for the benefit of the wildlife. Sorry, I'm in the 'hate 'em' camp too, but I do earn a fair few quid a year looking after them for other people .
__________________ All the best - Glutton 4 Punishment! Old enough to know better, young enough not to care! PARSNIPS is NOT a SWEAR word, but CAKE is !!!!!!! ![]() Meteorological Mastermind! ![]() Member of the 'MOJO-by-MAIL' Subscribers Club ![]() I'm NORMAL - it's the rest of the world that's out of STEP!Last edited by Glutton4...; 23-02-2010 at 10:44 AM. |
| ||||
| Sorry all you peeps hate them; I don't think leylandii are appropriate in any 'built up' area. I live in the middle of nowhere, where its my home and then The Wash followed by the north sea which is wide and empty with nothing to stop the winds comind from the artic. In my situation they make a lovely windbreak and give the birds a home in this treeless and flat landscape all that with the bonus of staying green. Thanks for the advice of blood & bone, I planted them in gale force wind and driving rain and its been the same it seems ever since with the exception of snow |
| |||
| Hi Minskey, I must admit I sell Leylands (steps back from all the boos ) but I do only sell them as a last resort, or if the customer absolutely insists on them! Silly question, when you bought them, were they pot-grown, or dug-up and transplanted? If it was the latter, that's why you're having probs. Leylands won't transplant from open-ground as they are so shallow-rooting, they don't form a rootball like 'normal' conifers, so a 5' tree should have a 5' diameter root - don't fancy digging a hole that wide |
| ||||
| Sorry, minskey, but i don't think leylandii are appropriate in -any- area, hate the things. If you need a windbreak hedge try Olearia, Griselinia, or even Alder.
__________________ Really great gardens seem to teeter on the edge of anarchy yet have a balance and poise that seem inevitable. Monty Don in Gardening Mad |
| ||||
| Quote:
I hate them, but if I lived there I'd have planted hundreds!
__________________ All the best - Glutton 4 Punishment! Old enough to know better, young enough not to care! PARSNIPS is NOT a SWEAR word, but CAKE is !!!!!!! ![]() Meteorological Mastermind! ![]() Member of the 'MOJO-by-MAIL' Subscribers Club ![]() I'm NORMAL - it's the rest of the world that's out of STEP! |
| ||||
| Quote:
BTW, no leylandii will grow back if you cut into old wood. Last edited by BilboWaggins; 25-02-2010 at 11:04 AM. |
| ||||
| Hi Torreya, they were pot grown & my back is still killing me from all the holes I dug ![]() Cheers Glutton4................. You obviously know this part of the world. ![]() Sagegreen, this is not Cornwall, it's the next stop from the artic, there is no gulf stream here...................... |
| ||||
| Woops, ok minskey and Glutton4..., your points taken, think i've been gardening in the gulf stream too long...
__________________ Really great gardens seem to teeter on the edge of anarchy yet have a balance and poise that seem inevitable. Monty Don in Gardening Mad |
| ||||
| I would tell why I hate Leylandi but a picture will sum it up a lot quicker ![]() my house is the one under the trees
__________________ Thought For The Day If a plum tomato breaks the law when it’s young Would it’s criminal past ketchup with it later? Last edited by enrich100; 28-02-2010 at 08:51 PM. |
![]() |
| Thread Tools | |
| Display Modes | |
| |
All times are GMT. The time now is 12:39 PM.












.
- it's the rest of the world that's out of STEP!
Linear Mode


