ᐅ Natural-style garden with hedge instead of fence (boundary hedge instead of fence)

Created on: 14 Apr 2019 17:52
M
Müllerin
I still owe you some garden photos...

As I’ve mentioned a few times before, we’re getting an “eco garden.”

After the excavation spoil from both halves of the house, which was just lying around here, was finally removed in September, nothing happened for a while.

Yellow excavator at a steel frame structure in front of a red brick wall, sandy soil.


At the end of March, it looked like this

Construction site with stone wall, green compact loader, mini excavator, wooden deck, and house in the background.


Then I planted the hedge (with the gardeners).
On the outside there is a lot of hawthorn, then 2 holly bushes (we’ll see if they don’t dry out too much in summer), 2 firethorns, a witch hazel, a butterfly bush, 2 copper mountain ashes, spireas, a viburnum, and a mock orange. Up front, separately, a maple.
Eventually, there will be a rose arch with a gate at the end of the path.

The lawn is growing rather slowly; it’s just too cold right now.

Black car in front of the garage of a brick house; blue covered trailer, gravel path, and bushes.


In the raised bed there are herbs and a few flowers, and in the mulched bed only blue/white/pink flowers will bloom. A privet hedge will be planted along the border this week. Luckily, I was able to convince our neighbors not to go for anything like thuja or cherry laurel or anything similarly horrible. (Actually, it was pretty simple: I would have refused to plant that stuff in our garden. That would have meant installing a fence, and they would have had to pay for the hedge themselves.)
If you don’t prune privet to a blocky shape, it flowers beautifully.

Front garden in front of a modern house: rubble stone retaining wall on the right, mulched bed, and plants.


Here’s a lilac; over Easter, vegetables will go into the raised bed, and on the right side towards the neighbors there will be a large bed in orange/yellow/red.

Front garden with red brick house, small extension, stone wall, and blooming branches in the foreground.


Yes.
Eventually, there will be an apple tree, once we find a tasty variety that the child isn’t allergic to.
I’d also like to add some kind of water feature, but we’ll see how that works without a fence with so many children around. Probably not at all.

We’ll see how it all turns out, but a gardener needs patience.

And here we’ll have the only nature-friendly garden; all around us there are golf-course lawns, gabions, dull uniform beech hedges, and hardly any flower beds.
M
Maria16
14 Apr 2019 20:11
My tree nursery said that small damson plum trees might grow less tall but will have a crown just as wide as normal ones.
N
Nordlys
14 Apr 2019 20:15
Apple trees are always a good choice and delicious.
Y
ypg
14 Apr 2019 21:30
Maria16 schrieb:
I’m really hesitant about planting a tree. So far, the hedge is mostly colorful, next to the leaf-sensitive neighbor there’s evergreen Ilex crenata, Portuguese laurel, and privet. Perennials are slowly filling in too.

But a tree would have to go "right in the middle," and since this year is the first time we can actually use the garden as such, I still can’t quite imagine where it would look good—or which one. My dream is a plum tree, but unfortunately, it tends to attract a lot of wasps. :-(

_a_ tree?
We have several
G
guckuck2
14 Apr 2019 21:33
In times when plots are becoming increasingly smaller and more expensive, espalier fruit trees are a good option.
M
Maria16
14 Apr 2019 22:00
My partner doesn’t want espalier fruit trees. Well, just one. You have to start somewhere.
But one thing that definitely won’t be included: an apple tree. My personal fruit tree no-go.
N
Nordlys
14 Apr 2019 22:05
Eating an apple every day keeps the doctor away.