Thanks Merchants. I appreciate the fab feedback! Do checkout my site too www.gardenninja.co.uk where there are thousands of other free gardening guides all taught by me! 🥷🌿🤘
That evergreen griselinia hedge has grown a lot since the how to plant a hedge video! Wow! My pyracantha Hedge I planted last year has grown a lot aswell but not as much as your griselinia hedge!
Hey Matt. I know! Hasn’t it just it’s huge now. It’s really taken off an gives a much softer boundary hedge to the garden. The whole Exploding Atom Garden has gone a bit nuts to be honest. Just how I like it! Haha. Pyracantha is slower growing but great as a deterrent as well. Had many a thorn in my thumb pruning those bad boys!! Happy Gardening.
Matt’s garden servise, good luck with your pyracantha hedge! Hope it will continue to grow moderately. I had one, fortunately not very long, that when mature threw up 2 meters long branches each year. I had not time for monthly trimming and pruning those thorny monsters once a year became a nightmare so eventually I got rid of it. I still have a hedge of dwarf pyracantha though. It grows a lot as well but being dwarf is more manageable. When I started my garden I wanted fast growing plants because I was impatient but after years of pruning and disposing of large amounts of clippings I have come to appreciate slow growing plants. 😁
Pat Pezzi pyracantha are vicious but great for wildlife and deterring burglars. I’ve never had a massive problem with them. I find they grow similarly to hawthorn which I cut two or three times a year. You must have really fertile soil! Great to see so many people growing hedges which are so much more beneficial than fence panels for wildlife, slowing down wind exposure and helping with drainage. Keep up the good work guys!! Lee
lol 😂 OMG I’m so chuffed with myself at age 40 I didn’t get my Dad to do it, and I do a better job, but ohh my I never knew how heavy and labour intensive 😂 and yes I did cut the wire at the very end, a bit gutted at that as I had my dads voice in my head saying ‘watch the wire, don’t cut the wire!’ 😂I was able to repair and finish off the tops yesterday! Thanks again! ❤
A good video, for hedge renovation though, have a look at hedge laying, it's not a simple thing for everyone to do, but it's the best way to renovate broadleaf hedges
Thanks Mercian. Hedge laying is such a heritage skill. Time consuming but brilliant to watch. So many patchy rural hedges could do with a proper lay again with the right tools. Happy gardening. Lee 🥷🌿
Hey love these videos. I have a griselenia hedge which is 2/3 years old. I’ve had conflicting advice from friends about trimming the top - ie do it to make it stronger and bushy - and also don’t cut top leaders as it will stop the height. Help - I’m confused and need some guidance from the NINJA. Great to see your griselenia- not a lot of folks have them here in Scotland
Hi Marc. Cut away. You don’t need to avoid the leaders on this kind of hedge. They are fast growing once established but cutting the tops will help them thicken up. My Griselinia hedge gets a foot or two taken off each year and it’s still putting on height!! It’s a fab shrub for Scotlands coastal gardens and brutal winters too! Happy growing! Lee 🥷🌿🤘
Hello just watched your hedge cutting video which I found very useful. I have a wide privet hedge, I wondered if I could cut it back to narrow it down, with some loppers I have. The start of august I cut back a foot wide section and 5 feet high. I can see that it is already sprouting new growth. Following your advice, I will cut back all the hedge in February, that hopefully will give it time to recover the the time winter comes again. Its a lovely hedge just to wide to get up n down the path. Your vid has giving me the confidence to do this now. And If Im likely to kill it, try to let me know before next February. Keep producing the great videos, very informative. Cheers.
Thanks David for the great comment. Yes Feb will give you the best visible recovery. Though you probably could do it now but it may look a bit bare through winter. I’m glad the videos helped and do let me know how the hedge renovation goes! You can always post a pic on my Facebook or twitter feed. Keep up the good gardening work! Lee
Hey Lee, fab video as always. I understand from your video this time of year is a good time to cut back hedges. I’ve a privet which has only a thin layer of foliage and is very leggy underneath. What’s the best method to get it to fill out? Thanks Lee!
The best method as brutal as it sounds is to hard prune it back by half. That’s if it’s really leggy. It will soon bush out the same year. I’ve demonstrated this on my monthly videos from last year and the year before. My guide to pruning and hard pruning will show you here. www.gardenninja.co.uk/how-to-prune-trim-and-clip-hedges-with-ease/ under the link to ‘renovating old hedges’ with privet as the example! Hope that helps! Lee 🥷🌿🤘
@@Gardenninja Amazing! Thanks Lee. Truly great to have an expert gardener (and busy TV personality) at hand for guidance on here. Thanks for being so responsive and helpful! 😊
Hi there great advice. I planted some golden privet a few years ago they're about 5ft tall now. I've cut them every year I didn't really know when to cut. I live in south of UK is it too late to cut now or should I wait till August? Also I want them a little higher. Should I still top them? Thanks for your videos
Hi Ciara. As long as birds aren’t nesting you’ll be fine so Just check them. Cut them twice a year again in autumn to really thicken them up! Happy gardening. Lee 🥷🌿
Great video - useful points like the chamber effecting growth and electric shears creating torn leaves that can be unsightly. I actually love using hand shears for the mindful exercise! What hand shears are you using please? :)
@@Gardenninja Fab! Thanks for the recommendation - I'll check them out for sure and mention you :) thanks for all the work you do, creating this awesome content!
Hi Lee, your videos are amazing. I’ve a star jasmine that’s gone really leggy, it’s growing along a fence and obstructing a narrow passageway. I would like to hard prune it back to the fence but this will mean losing all the thin layer of top foliage! If I hard prune will new foliage appear? What’s your advice? Thanks Lee!
If it’s the annual star Jasmin then yes it give it a good winter haircut. If it’s the evergreen one they’re slow to regenerate so be a bit more delicate with it! Hope that helps. 🥷🌿👌
@@Gardenninja Brilliant, thanks Lee. So am I right to think I can hard prune Summer jasmine between November to March but gradually reduce the evergreen one? Thanks Lee, great to have advice from a pro!
Hi Lee, I planted 89 hedges, most were different sizes due to availability. My question is: when you give the hedges their first clipping back and the clippings after, did you clip yours to the one length? Thank you
Hi Marguerite. Yes you want to cut the top so all plants or whips are level. That way they grow at relatively similar rates. Obviously some plants are quicker but this method will help the hedge thicken up. Even if it means taking it down far lower to the smallest plant! 🥷🌿🤘
@@Gardenninja Hi Lee, just wondering when clipping back hedges in spring, do you clip the sides as well as the tops, or do you just clip the tops. Thank you
Hi I’m not a professional but I have the best part of 500ft of 7ft high hedging on my property that I look after, half is privet & the other half is yew. I’m getting myself a new hedge trimmer and was wondering, in my situation would you favour a 60cm blade or a 70cm blade? (Just for reference I’m looking at the stihl hse electric range, 71 & 81) Thanks for any help 👍
Hi Consistent Noddy, With large tall hedges I'd always recommend a longer blade for less sweeps of the hedge which reduces unnecessary damage. It also means less work for your arms too! Happy hedge cutting! Lee
I wasn’t sure if I could use a rechargeable pole chainsaw to shorten the height of my large garden hedge. I’ve never used it before, it’s new, so I was worried about kickback. My hedge has some thick branches growing on the top of the hedge and I can’t cut them down with my rechargeable pole trimmer. I do have some manual shears that have been good over the years but are now a bit blunt. I bought them from Lidls, they were cheap. Also, I wasn’t sure if I should sharpen them on a metal block with WD40 or buy some new manual shears from B&Q. They sell Fiskars brand. Any feedback would be appreciated. Thanks.
Hi, Lee. I am planting a hornbeam hedge in the next month or so. I have read some say that hornbeam should not be trimmed back at all until it reaches one's desired height--in my case 3 meters. Others say as soon as the seedling is planted, cut it down by a third to encourage branching. In your experience, which way is best?
Hi Thomas. I would always trim Hornbeam. In my experience of growing and renovating hedges simply leaving them always ends up in thin weak growth rather than a well meshed stable hedge. Leaving one main leader to get to 3m will lead to lots of mini trees rather than a thick well established hedge! Happy trimming! 🥷🤘🌿
@@Gardenninja So if the seedlings will be arriving at 45-60cm tall, would recommend cutting them down to 30-40cm? Maybe more? Thank you very much for your response! There is a lot of information on the internet, and it is hard to determine what is reliable. Glad to have your expertise.
Hi Lee, I have the same question about some Portuguese Laurel I planted last year. Will topping the hedge to encourage thickening reduce the plant growing in desired height? Great vids
Hi Jon. Good question. The quick answer is yes. It will focus the energy on lower growth and side shoots. Best to top them each year to form a thick hedge then let it get bigger after say 2-3 years of establishing. Thanks for the kind words on my videos. Make sure you checkout my blog too for loads more gardening guides. www.gardenninja.co.uk/ 🌿🥷🤘
I bought a flat which has a garden. Hedges are so weak even though they have been kept short to thicken further down the plant. Could there be a problem? I want my hedges to be dense. What is your recommendation? I live in Glasgow by the way:)
Hi Traveller. It’s hard to advise without photos. If you could use the Garden Ninja forum that would be great. To thicken any hedge a hard prune is usually the best way. It depends on the species but cutting back hard usually in early spring is the best way to thicken and revitalise an old hedge. Happy gardening! Lee You can visit the gardening forum here. 🌿👉www.gardenninja.co.uk/forum/
Glad you liked it! Make sure you subscribe for hundreds of garden guides. You can also read my active blog with yet more garden tips and tricks! www.gardenninja.co.uk/ 🥷🌿🤘
Great video and very informative. I know you covered pruning newly planted hedges here but I still have a question or two if you could kindly advise: I have just planted a new Privet hedge (L. Ovalifolium) with nursery grown bare root plants of 80cm-100cm high. I have planted 50 of them at 4 per metre and ran out of plants towards the end of my fence line :( I have about 12 metres left to fill and no more pocket money... so I was wondering if I could fill the gap with some L. vulgare which I could get my hands on - although not ideal nursery stock it is seemingly healthy and growing wild in a nearby copse. Is it okay to plant them to continue my Privet hedge? Should I still prune these plants twice a year even though they are only currently 80cm or so high? How much should I cut back - the bloke at the nursery said to cut them back by half... would much appreciate some advice. I have subscribed by the way - great channel. Thanks
Hi. Thanks for the kind words and glad you like the guide! The nursery advice is quite right you to need to be a bit brutal to ensure the privet thickens and meshes together. Hence cutting it back by half. Then all it’s energy goes into roots and then new side shoots. You could use the other species. It may grow at a different rate though. Then clip twice a year as per my guide. In a few years it will have established as one hedge. I wouldn’t feed other than maybe a mulch in year two. If you over feed it won’t establish as strong a root structure. So you need to be a bit cruel to be kind! Hope that helps. Lee
Can I do formative pruning in winter for Griselinia? I have a lot of hedging that was planted last spring/summer which has not yet been pruned, now I realise I should have pruned them after planting. Should I wait until spring for formative pruning?
Hi Iwan. Wait until Sprint to prune evergreens. I’ve got some more information on why that is but it’s best to wait until March in the UK before you make any pruning. Pruning now with the risk of frost and fact it’s the wrong time of year may harm it! www.gardenninja.co.uk/winter-gardening-jobs-for-beginners-garden-maintenance-made-easy/ 🥷🌿🙌
Glad you think so! Make sure you subscribe for more and checkout my blog where there are hundreds of free gardening guides, www.gardenninja.co.uk 🌿🥷 Happy gardening! Lee
You’re welcome. I’m glad the guides helpful. Make sure you check out my blog for hundreds more free guides and garden design tutorials. www.gardenninja.co.uk/ 🥷🌿🤘
I have 4 year old hedges that are a little gangly on the bottom, and thick on top. They're 6 to 7 ft tall. Is it to late to cut them back to encourage growth to thicken in the bottom? How much should I cut?
Hi Rachel. You can be brutal with a lot of deciduous hedges ones that lose their leaves. You’ll never completely regenerate the bottom but if can help force growth lower down. You could do that now providing there are no birds nesting. Happy trimming! Lee 🥷🌿🤘
It's been a busy week at Garden Ninja HQ cutting hundreds of meters of hedging. So I thought it would be a good time to show all my garden hacks on cutting hedges. It doesn't need to be a drama and these tips should help sve you time and effort in the garden! Let me know your thoughts below or any garden questions you may have. Happy gardening! Lee Garden Ninja
Garden Ninja Ltd hi! Love the tips, can you advise on cutting back my lavender, I’ve 2 varieties, I’m a novice ...but planted 2 hedgerows of them...one is still flowering but other is nearly over.
Thanks for the great feedback! With lavender you’re wanting to cut back 1/3 of the green shoots / new growth at the end of each flowering season. So when the flowers have crisped up. This will help keep it in shape. Be careful though if you cut back to old wood the brown stems it won’t grow back from there. So trimming each years essential to keep them healthy and dense rather than straggly! Hope that helps Clare! Happy Gardening.
I have a hedge question...I want to surround my garden with espalier apple trees as a fence, and put a short hedge in front of the apples. My question is: what sort of distance should i plan for between the hedge and the trees? Will the espalier trees be lacking nutrients due to the hedges being close by?
Hi, I have a leylandii hedge and took quite a bit of height off it last year and left it quite bare and woody on top. I’m a bit worried I might have taken too much off, will it grow back and cover up? I’ve heard that it might not grow back..
Hi Andy. Unfortunately conifers don’t grow back from old wood. So when you take back say Leylandii to old brown wood they stay that way. Best way to trim conifers is to just take off small amounts of the new green foliage a few times a year to keep them in check. Sorry I can’t bring better news! Lee
Hi Ace of Spades. I’d leave evergreen cuttings until April when they’ve woken up from their winter slow down. You’ll get better results with rooting that way. Happy propagating! Lee
tip number 3 keep your power trimmers well greased are oils thy will self sharpen with friction give your bolts a quarter of turn every couple of years depending how often you use them
Hi Janet. Sorry you feel that way. No one pays me to create these guides I rely on ads to fund them. I create these outside of my full time garden design practice as I find that new gardeners find them useful. Ads are a necessary part of providing free content. Otherwise I wouldn’t be able to film all these guides to help new gardeners. Good luck in your gardening endeavours though. Lee Garden Ninja. 🌿🥷🤘
Brilliant video. Full of all the information needed. Keep up the hard work
Thanks for the great feedback. Glad it’s got all the info you need. I’ll be making more vlogs soon! Happy Gardening.
I guess it's pretty randomly asking but do anyone know a good site to watch newly released series online?
@Iker Emilio lately I have been using FlixZone. You can find it on google =)
@Lachlan Shepherd Yup, been watching on FlixZone for years myself :D
@Lachlan Shepherd thanks, I went there and it seems to work :D I really appreciate it!
Must say anyone who has such a fantastic shave as you have is probably the perfect person to deliver this video 😂...thanks mate 👍
Trimming my hedges for the first time and this was invaluable
Nice to see a young man who knows his stuff well done garden Ninja.
Thanks so much Kevin! 🥷🌿🤘
Awesome man, this is all new to me with family life but it feels really natural in my primal heart
Glad to hear it!
This Brit is on point
Thanks Austin! 🤘🥷🌿
So glad I found this video. You're a great teacher-- also, great hair!
Thanks Merchants. I appreciate the fab feedback! Do checkout my site too www.gardenninja.co.uk where there are thousands of other free gardening guides all taught by me! 🥷🌿🤘
man is the hedge trimming king... even got a hedge trimmed haircut 😂😂😂😂
🥷🌿😜
My very first hedge vid, thanQ for the useful tips.
You’re welcome Silent Night. Glad to help! 🥷🤘🌿
such a useful video. Im a novice and you answered all my questions! Thank you.
Thanks Susan! I’m glad my video guide is helpful. Make sure you subscribe for hundreds more of my gardening guides! 🥷🌿🙌 Happy gardening. Lee
That evergreen griselinia hedge has grown a lot since the how to plant a hedge video! Wow!
My pyracantha Hedge I planted last year has grown a lot aswell but not as much as your griselinia hedge!
Hey Matt. I know! Hasn’t it just it’s huge now. It’s really taken off an gives a much softer boundary hedge to the garden. The whole Exploding Atom Garden has gone a bit nuts to be honest. Just how I like it! Haha. Pyracantha is slower growing but great as a deterrent as well. Had many a thorn in my thumb pruning those bad boys!! Happy Gardening.
Matt’s garden servise, good luck with your pyracantha hedge! Hope it will continue to grow moderately.
I had one, fortunately not very long, that when mature threw up 2 meters long branches each year. I had not time for monthly trimming and pruning those thorny monsters once a year became a nightmare so eventually I got rid of it.
I still have a hedge of dwarf pyracantha though. It grows a lot as well but being dwarf is more manageable. When I started my garden I wanted fast growing plants because I was impatient but after years of pruning and disposing of large amounts of clippings I have come to appreciate slow growing plants. 😁
Pat Pezzi pyracantha are vicious but great for wildlife and deterring burglars. I’ve never had a massive problem with them. I find they grow similarly to hawthorn which I cut two or three times a year. You must have really fertile soil! Great to see so many people growing hedges which are so much more beneficial than fence panels for wildlife, slowing down wind exposure and helping with drainage. Keep up the good work guys!! Lee
Thank you for your video!
About to cut my hedge for the first time!!!! Pray for me! 😂❤
You don’t need prayers. You’re a Nina now! 🥷🤘🌿
lol 😂 OMG I’m so chuffed with myself at age 40 I didn’t get my Dad to do it, and I do a better job, but ohh my I never knew how heavy and labour intensive 😂 and yes I did cut the wire at the very end, a bit gutted at that as I had my dads voice in my head saying ‘watch the wire, don’t cut the wire!’ 😂I was able to repair and finish off the tops yesterday!
Thanks again! ❤
Really useful and presented in a great easy to watch style - thanks
You’re welcome. Glad it’s been helpful. Make sure you subscribe for more! Happy Gardening. Lee
💯👍
Brilliant video and lovely work , keep the great content coming LIKED and SUBSCRIBED from the UK
Thanks so much Dan. I’m glad you’re enjoying my gardening guides. Happy gardening. Lee 🥷🤘🌿
Thank you for this helpful video. I'm a shrub novice and needed some guidelines to give me a bit more confidence. Cheers!
All my questions answered. Nice one mate. Thanks.
You’re welcome! Happy gardening. 🥷🌿🤘
That was good to know, it's my first time doing my hedge, thanks for that
You’re welcome Grace. Glad it’s been helpful for you! 🥷🤘🌿 Subscribe for hundreds more garden tips and hacks. Lee
Englishmen know about hedges! Thanks so much for this
You’re welcome Penelope. Glad it’s been helpful! Happy Gardening.
Some good hedge trimming tips there Ninj 😊
Thanks mate, very helpful
Cheers Paul! 🥷🤘🌿
Some great tips! Hope you are enjoying the summer! :-)
thanks, this was the explanation i needed, very clear
You're welcome! 🥷🌿🤘
A good video, for hedge renovation though, have a look at hedge laying, it's not a simple thing for everyone to do, but it's the best way to renovate broadleaf hedges
Thanks Mercian. Hedge laying is such a heritage skill. Time consuming but brilliant to watch. So many patchy rural hedges could do with a proper lay again with the right tools. Happy gardening. Lee 🥷🌿
Very helpful video thanks for the advice 👍
You’re welcome Claire. Glad it’s helpful. Happy gardening! Lee 🥷🌿
Hey love these videos. I have a griselenia hedge which is 2/3 years old. I’ve had conflicting advice from friends about trimming the top - ie do it to make it stronger and bushy - and also don’t cut top leaders as it will stop the height. Help - I’m confused and need some guidance from the NINJA. Great to see your griselenia- not a lot of folks have them here in Scotland
Hi Marc. Cut away. You don’t need to avoid the leaders on this kind of hedge. They are fast growing once established but cutting the tops will help them thicken up. My Griselinia hedge gets a foot or two taken off each year and it’s still putting on height!! It’s a fab shrub for Scotlands coastal gardens and brutal winters too! Happy growing! Lee 🥷🌿🤘
@@Gardenninja thank you for the fast response and information. Great channel this
Hola amigo, thank you for your tips, greetings from Chile 🤗🌻🌻
You’re welcome. I’m glad you like my gardening guides! Subscribe for even more of them. Happy gardening in Chile! 🥷🤘🌿
Hey! Good video - all informations on point! Great job 👍🏼💚
Thanks Steve! Glad you’re enjoying my gardening content. Happy gardening! Lee 🥷🤘🌿
Hello just watched your hedge cutting video which I found very useful. I have a wide privet hedge, I wondered if I could cut it back to narrow it down, with some loppers I have. The start of august I cut back a foot wide section and 5 feet high. I can see that it is already sprouting new growth. Following your advice, I will cut back all the hedge in February, that hopefully will give it time to recover the the time winter comes again.
Its a lovely hedge just to wide to get up n down the path. Your vid has giving me the confidence to do this now.
And If Im likely to kill it, try to let me know before next February.
Keep producing the great videos, very informative. Cheers.
Thanks David for the great comment. Yes Feb will give you the best visible recovery. Though you probably could do it now but it may look a bit bare through winter. I’m glad the videos helped and do let me know how the hedge renovation goes! You can always post a pic on my Facebook or twitter feed. Keep up the good gardening work! Lee
Hey Lee, fab video as always. I understand from your video this time of year is a good time to cut back hedges. I’ve a privet which has only a thin layer of foliage and is very leggy underneath. What’s the best method to get it to fill out? Thanks Lee!
The best method as brutal as it sounds is to hard prune it back by half. That’s if it’s really leggy. It will soon bush out the same year. I’ve demonstrated this on my monthly videos from last year and the year before. My guide to pruning and hard pruning will show you here. www.gardenninja.co.uk/how-to-prune-trim-and-clip-hedges-with-ease/ under the link to ‘renovating old hedges’ with privet as the example! Hope that helps! Lee 🥷🌿🤘
@@Gardenninja Amazing! Thanks Lee. Truly great to have an expert gardener (and busy TV personality) at hand for guidance on here. Thanks for being so responsive and helpful! 😊
@timatkins6693 you’re welcome. Gardening and educating others is my passion! Let your other gardening mates know where to look if they’re struggling!
Brilliant! Thank you for sharing
You’re welcome Sarah! Happy gardening. 🥷🌿🙌 Lee
Hi there great advice. I planted some golden privet a few years ago they're about 5ft tall now. I've cut them every year
I didn't really know when to cut. I live in south of UK is it too late to cut now or should I wait till August? Also I want them a little higher. Should I still top them? Thanks for your videos
Hi Ciara. As long as birds aren’t nesting you’ll be fine so Just check them. Cut them twice a year again in autumn to really thicken them up! Happy gardening. Lee 🥷🌿
@@Gardenninja nice one thanks Lee. None are nesting in my privet but definitely nesting in some climbing ivy I have . I won't disturb anything 🙏
This was great and useful.
Brilliant. Needed this for new privet.
Thanks Alex! Glad it’s helpful. 🥷🤘🌿
Great video - useful points like the chamber effecting growth and electric shears creating torn leaves that can be unsightly. I actually love using hand shears for the mindful exercise! What hand shears are you using please? :)
Thanks Briony. I love hand sheers too!! They’re from Niwaki. Their stuffs great. Tell them I sent you it you visit their shop or site! 🥷🤘🌿
Me too.
@@Gardenninja Fab! Thanks for the recommendation - I'll check them out for sure and mention you :) thanks for all the work you do, creating this awesome content!
ua-cam.com/video/yka-H9j-7bc/v-deo.html
Hi Lee, your videos are amazing. I’ve a star jasmine that’s gone really leggy, it’s growing along a fence and obstructing a narrow passageway. I would like to hard prune it back to the fence but this will mean losing all the thin layer of top foliage! If I hard prune will new foliage appear? What’s your advice? Thanks Lee!
If it’s the annual star Jasmin then yes it give it a good winter haircut. If it’s the evergreen one they’re slow to regenerate so be a bit more delicate with it! Hope that helps. 🥷🌿👌
@@Gardenninja Brilliant, thanks Lee. So am I right to think I can hard prune Summer jasmine between November to March but gradually reduce the evergreen one? Thanks Lee, great to have advice from a pro!
Good advice. Thank you 👍
I use a tarp when I’m cutting hedges onto grass saves having to go through it getting leaves up and messing the grass with the rake
Great video though 👍
I’ve used them in the past and it’s a great idea especially on clients gardens!!! 🥷🤘🌿
A great tarpaulin to use is a painters stairway one. It’s a nice width and a decent length, just roll it up and shackle out.
Great tip! Thanks for sharing Frances! 🥷🌿🙌
In the netherlands they will be happy seeing this video , using those secateurs and handshears from Okatsune..
Glad to hear it! I love Japanese garden tools. They’re the best! Happy trimming. Lee 🥷🌿
Skilled hedge trimmer
Thanks! 🥷🌿
Hi Lee, I planted 89 hedges, most were different sizes due to availability. My question is: when you give the hedges their first clipping back and the clippings after, did you clip yours to the one length? Thank you
Hi Marguerite. Yes you want to cut the top so all plants or whips are level. That way they grow at relatively similar rates. Obviously some plants are quicker but this method will help the hedge thicken up. Even if it means taking it down far lower to the smallest plant! 🥷🌿🤘
@@Gardenninja Thanks Lee
@@Gardenninja Hi Lee, just wondering when clipping back hedges in spring, do you clip the sides as well as the tops, or do you just clip the tops. Thank you
Great tips!!!
Thanks so much! Happy hedge cutting. Lee 🥷🌿👌
ua-cam.com/video/yka-H9j-7bc/v-deo.html
Hi
I’m not a professional but I have the best part of 500ft of 7ft high hedging on my property that I look after, half is privet & the other half is yew. I’m getting myself a new hedge trimmer and was wondering, in my situation would you favour a 60cm blade or a 70cm blade?
(Just for reference I’m looking at the stihl hse electric range, 71 & 81)
Thanks for any help 👍
Hi Consistent Noddy, With large tall hedges I'd always recommend a longer blade for less sweeps of the hedge which reduces unnecessary damage. It also means less work for your arms too! Happy hedge cutting! Lee
@@Gardenninja thanks for the reply Lee, it’s appreciated 👍👍
ua-cam.com/video/yka-H9j-7bc/v-deo.html
I wasn’t sure if I could use a rechargeable pole chainsaw to shorten the height of my large garden hedge. I’ve never used it before, it’s new, so I was worried about kickback. My hedge has some thick branches growing on the top of the hedge and I can’t cut them down with my rechargeable pole trimmer. I do have some manual shears that have been good over the years but are now a bit blunt. I bought them from Lidls, they were cheap. Also, I wasn’t sure if I should sharpen them on a metal block with WD40 or buy some new manual shears from B&Q. They sell Fiskars brand. Any feedback would be appreciated. Thanks.
Really informative. Thanks.
You're welcome!
Hi, Lee. I am planting a hornbeam hedge in the next month or so. I have read some say that hornbeam should not be trimmed back at all until it reaches one's desired height--in my case 3 meters. Others say as soon as the seedling is planted, cut it down by a third to encourage branching. In your experience, which way is best?
Hi Thomas. I would always trim Hornbeam. In my experience of growing and renovating hedges simply leaving them always ends up in thin weak growth rather than a well meshed stable hedge. Leaving one main leader to get to 3m will lead to lots of mini trees rather than a thick well established hedge! Happy trimming! 🥷🤘🌿
@@Gardenninja So if the seedlings will be arriving at 45-60cm tall, would recommend cutting them down to 30-40cm? Maybe more? Thank you very much for your response! There is a lot of information on the internet, and it is hard to determine what is reliable. Glad to have your expertise.
Hi Lee, I have the same question about some Portuguese Laurel I planted last year. Will topping the hedge to encourage thickening reduce the plant growing in desired height? Great vids
Hi Jon. Good question. The quick answer is yes. It will focus the energy on lower growth and side shoots. Best to top them each year to form a thick hedge then let it get bigger after say 2-3 years of establishing. Thanks for the kind words on my videos. Make sure you checkout my blog too for loads more gardening guides. www.gardenninja.co.uk/ 🌿🥷🤘
@@Gardenninja Great feedback, thanks Lee. I will check out the blog. 👍
I bought a flat which has a garden. Hedges are so weak even though they have been kept short to thicken further down the plant. Could there be a problem? I want my hedges to be dense. What is your recommendation? I live in Glasgow by the way:)
Hi Traveller. It’s hard to advise without photos. If you could use the Garden Ninja forum that would be great. To thicken any hedge a hard prune is usually the best way. It depends on the species but cutting back hard usually in early spring is the best way to thicken and revitalise an old hedge. Happy gardening! Lee You can visit the gardening forum here. 🌿👉www.gardenninja.co.uk/forum/
Great video, thanks a million
Glad you liked it! Make sure you subscribe for hundreds of garden guides. You can also read my active blog with yet more garden tips and tricks! www.gardenninja.co.uk/ 🥷🌿🤘
This helped me greatly 👍👍👍
Thanks Raffica! 🥷🌿🤘
Hello sir can you please tell me how did you fit that plate on hedge trimmer blade?
Very helpful thanks.
Glad my gardening guides are useful! Do check out my site too with hundreds more free gardening guides! www.gardenninja.co.uk/ 🥷🤘🌿 Happy Gardening!
Great tips, thanks
You’re welcome SnowBlade. Make sure you checkout my award winning garden blog too hundreds more free gardening guides! www.gardenninja.co.uk 🥷🌿🤘
Great video and very informative. I know you covered pruning newly planted hedges here but I still have a question or two if you could kindly advise: I have just planted a new Privet hedge (L. Ovalifolium) with nursery grown bare root plants of 80cm-100cm high. I have planted 50 of them at 4 per metre and ran out of plants towards the end of my fence line :( I have about 12 metres left to fill and no more pocket money... so I was wondering if I could fill the gap with some L. vulgare which I could get my hands on - although not ideal nursery stock it is seemingly healthy and growing wild in a nearby copse. Is it okay to plant them to continue my Privet hedge?
Should I still prune these plants twice a year even though they are only currently 80cm or so high? How much should I cut back - the bloke at the nursery said to cut them back by half... would much appreciate some advice.
I have subscribed by the way - great channel. Thanks
Hi. Thanks for the kind words and glad you like the guide! The nursery advice is quite right you to need to be a bit brutal to ensure the privet thickens and meshes together. Hence cutting it back by half. Then all it’s energy goes into roots and then new side shoots. You could use the other species. It may grow at a different rate though. Then clip twice a year as per my guide. In a few years it will have established as one hedge. I wouldn’t feed other than maybe a mulch in year two. If you over feed it won’t establish as strong a root structure. So you need to be a bit cruel to be kind! Hope that helps. Lee
@@Gardenninja Thanks for the detailed answer - very helpful, I will take your advice. Happy New Year to you.
Awesome video! Subscribed!
Thanks and happy gardening! Lee
Brill. 👍
Can I do formative pruning in winter for Griselinia? I have a lot of hedging that was planted last spring/summer which has not yet been pruned, now I realise I should have pruned them after planting. Should I wait until spring for formative pruning?
Hi Iwan. Wait until Sprint to prune evergreens. I’ve got some more information on why that is but it’s best to wait until March in the UK before you make any pruning. Pruning now with the risk of frost and fact it’s the wrong time of year may harm it! www.gardenninja.co.uk/winter-gardening-jobs-for-beginners-garden-maintenance-made-easy/ 🥷🌿🙌
Awsome information
Glad you think so! Make sure you subscribe for more and checkout my blog where there are hundreds of free gardening guides, www.gardenninja.co.uk 🌿🥷 Happy gardening! Lee
Thanks super useful information
You’re welcome. I’m glad the guides helpful. Make sure you check out my blog for hundreds more free guides and garden design tutorials. www.gardenninja.co.uk/ 🥷🌿🤘
Great video!👍🏼👍🏼
Cheers Daniel. Make sure you subscribe for more garden design guides! Lee 🥷🌿
I have 4 year old hedges that are a little gangly on the bottom, and thick on top. They're 6 to 7 ft tall. Is it to late to cut them back to encourage growth to thicken in the bottom? How much should I cut?
Hi Rachel. You can be brutal with a lot of deciduous hedges ones that lose their leaves. You’ll never completely regenerate the bottom but if can help force growth lower down. You could do that now providing there are no birds nesting. Happy trimming! Lee 🥷🌿🤘
It's been a busy week at Garden Ninja HQ cutting hundreds of meters of hedging. So I thought it would be a good time to show all my garden hacks on cutting hedges. It doesn't need to be a drama and these tips should help sve you time and effort in the garden! Let me know your thoughts below or any garden questions you may have. Happy gardening! Lee Garden Ninja
Garden Ninja Ltd hi! Love the tips, can you advise on cutting back my lavender, I’ve 2 varieties, I’m a novice ...but planted 2 hedgerows of them...one is still flowering but other is nearly over.
Thanks for the great feedback! With lavender you’re wanting to cut back 1/3 of the green shoots / new growth at the end of each flowering season. So when the flowers have crisped up. This will help keep it in shape. Be careful though if you cut back to old wood the brown stems it won’t grow back from there. So trimming each years essential to keep them healthy and dense rather than straggly! Hope that helps Clare! Happy Gardening.
Garden Ninja Ltd thank you!
If my predecessor cut the top of the hedge unevenly, how do I flatten it out? It looks as if an elephant has taken a huge bite 🙄
@@Tuppence196 You can either hard prune back to the lowest level or just wait for the dip to grow out. If that makes sense!
Good information 👍
So nice of you and glad my gardening guides are helpful! 🥷🌿🌈
Loving all your vids! Thankyou so much for making them! I’m learning so much!! Quick question: are those hand shears 217or 231? Thankyou 🌱🌻
Hey Peewee. Thanks for the comment and kind words! They’re the 217 shorter ones! Happy Pruning! Lee
Fantastic, thanks for the info you star! Soooo much appreciated 🌱🌻 Sal
I have a hedge question...I want to surround my garden with espalier apple trees as a fence, and put a short hedge in front of the apples. My question is: what sort of distance should i plan for between the hedge and the trees? Will the espalier trees be lacking nutrients due to the hedges being close by?
Hi, I have a leylandii hedge and took quite a bit of height off it last year and left it quite bare and woody on top. I’m a bit worried I might have taken too much off, will it grow back and cover up? I’ve heard that it might not grow back..
Hi Andy. Unfortunately conifers don’t grow back from old wood. So when you take back say Leylandii to old brown wood they stay that way. Best way to trim conifers is to just take off small amounts of the new green foliage a few times a year to keep them in check. Sorry I can’t bring better news! Lee
Garden Ninja Ltd thanks for your response, just not sure what I’m best doing now. Should I remove them? They’re quite unsightly
Depends on your preference. If they’re really ugly then yes. Maybe choose another evergreen species that can be hard pruned. Ie Laurel.
Great video.
Thanks Crooks! Make sure you also checkout my award winning Garden blog and forum for more gardening help! www.gardenninja.co.uk/ Happy gardening. 🥷🌿🤘
Thank you
You’re welcome! Make sure you also check out my web site www.gardenninja.co.uk for hundreds more free expert gardening guides! 🌿🥷🤘
Thanx for the info bro
You’re welcome! There’s more detail here too on hedge pruning. www.gardenninja.co.uk/how-to-prune-trim-and-clip-hedges-with-ease/ 🥷🌿👌
Great info 😁
Thanks so much! Make sure you subscribe for hundreds more beginner gardening guides! 🥷🤘🌿 Lee
ua-cam.com/video/yka-H9j-7bc/v-deo.html
Is February/March ok to take cuttings from the griselinia
Hi Ace of Spades. I’d leave evergreen cuttings until April when they’ve woken up from their winter slow down. You’ll get better results with rooting that way. Happy propagating! Lee
For your hair was that a cordless or petrol trimmer ? Looks dope
Cordless! 😂😂😂 Happy gardening. 🥷🌿🤘
Perfect air cut for the craft
Solid trimmer
Thanks! 🥷🌿🤘
THank you
What are the name of these hedges in this video? I think theres 2 different types of them in this video ❤
One’s a privet. The other a Griselinia. You can find out more on my hedge cutting guide here Kaite. www.gardenninja.co.uk/how-to-lay-a-hedge/ 🌿🥷🤘
tip number 3 keep your power trimmers well greased are oils thy will self sharpen with friction give your bolts a quarter of turn every couple of years depending how often you use them
💯👍👍
HOW TO USE ELECTRIC TRIMMER? HOLD IT PERPENDICULAR OR?
Looks like you’ve had a bad accident with the clippers there mate 🥶💈
Leaf blower clippings
How did you trim your hair in this shape?
With clippers and scissors! 🥷🤘
👌💕
ua-cam.com/video/yka-H9j-7bc/v-deo.html
No ear defenders on? That's a health and safety breach.
Loool!
A talking Kewpie doll?
"hi I'm steve-o, and this is hedge trimming"
😂 😂 😂
Holy smoke you have beautiful teeth 😮
Thanks. They’re all my own. Got good dental genetics! 🥷🌿😉
He paid good money for that hair gel and those teeth!
sORRY BUT A 15 SECOND AD AND THEN A 1:47 AD MEANS I'M OUT OF HERE. PITY YOU SEEM TO HAVE SOME GOOD INFO ON YOUR CHANNEL
Hi Janet. Sorry you feel that way. No one pays me to create these guides I rely on ads to fund them. I create these outside of my full time garden design practice as I find that new gardeners find them useful. Ads are a necessary part of providing free content. Otherwise I wouldn’t be able to film all these guides to help new gardeners. Good luck in your gardening endeavours though. Lee Garden Ninja. 🌿🥷🤘
вот ты чудо со своим хохолком!
makita battery more power faster
Damn life's been bad to Steve 0
Wrong video 😂😂
What the Hell is wrong with his hair?
Great video! Thank you.
Glad you liked it!