Hi all,
We, barely, got planning permission but did so on the condition we plant 3 metre thick hedge between our site and my brother's who will also build at the same time as ourselves. The county council have asked for trees native to the area such as Hazel, Beech, Hawthorn, Holly as well as Ashand many more...all being "2 and half metres high at time of planting" (Cost approx 4500 euro). I have been advised by local garden centres that the Ash trees grow horizontally near the surface of the ground and may interfere with the foundations of the house. We are annoyed having to plant such a density (3 metres thick) of unattractive trees or "weeds" as my future mother-in-law calls them! This is ridiculous as we are family, building on family land next door to our parents!!! We, actually, wanted a Beech hedge with an arch between each of the three houses for convenience! Can anyone confirm or otherwise the "Ash" theory? Thank you.
Thank you all for the fantastic advice. We spoke with the planner this morning and, unfortunately, the only leeway he allowed us was for the Holly trees to be a little shorter as the garden centres have difficulty sourcing 2 and a half metre high Hollies. He "will be inspecting height of trees, width of hedge and species of the trees." He advised us that, in a few years time, when the trees are beginning to smother eachother, that we are to take some of them out!!!
I, certainly would not want exotic species of trees but my grandmother's house which is an old landlord's house (on the other side of my brother's site) and there are beautiful Boxwood hedges, Beech hedges with arches, Horse Chestnut, orchard fruit trees and other beautiful trees which really give the feel of an era gone by. (Maybe I'm mistaken...maybe these are not native species?) As our house is an Edwardian style and very much in keeping with olde worlde, inside and out, I really hoped to be spending my money on trees which suit the house more amd my taste!
Yes, that sounds excessive.Also, thank you Mactheknife1 for the future forest website, I will def check that out. I would be delighted if it cost a lot less than this but these are the quotes we're getting form local garden centres. We have been told to plant
11 Beech, 12 Ash, 20 Silver Birch, 37 Hawthorn, Hazel, 16 Holly
(2 and half metres high, holly being only exception with some leeway re height)
Does this sound excessive or within reason? When you build a house, it's generally for the first and last time in my area anyway and so I am totally naive to everything! :-/
Silver birch is totally unsuitable in a hedge.
Liza,
in Ireland (rep) the onus to check compliance with planning conditions is on the Building control section of your local authority. Unless this planner is a little general with influence above and beyond his station, its the Building control officer that will have the final say as to whether what you do complies with planning or not.
Contact your local building control officer and put your issues to him, requesting an official clarification that what you want to do does not contravene the planning conditions (there is ALWAYS leeway)....
also, does that particular condition have a time span mentioned?? ie "prior to commencement" or "within 6 months of completion" or "within the first planting season",....
+1. I also second the recommendation above to talk to Future Forests.
Let's be a little bit clear here, the planner is talking about a privacy hedge along the site boundary not a replacement hedgerow for one that you have removed at the front of your site?
For a silver birch, or even an ash or mountain ash to grow into a tree like shape, it needs to be clear of the hedging around it. The other alternative is to 'hedge' the trees (this is what you do with beech, hornbeam, hawthorn, blackthorn, holly and the like). But, as far as I know, silver birch and mountain ash don't 'hedge', you can't trim and shape them. They won't expand into a hedge. You can do that with ash, but it is a little tricky and ash grows like stink so it is hard to manage (you end up with lots of stalks going up from the top of the hedge - it'll grow six feet in a season.
Basically, birch is a woodland tree.
I am glad the planner wants a good hedge planted. No problem with that. I applaud it.
But the size of the trees makes them expensive. Can you talk to the guy, offer to plant twice the number of trees he suggests - just smaller ones. Explain the cost issue and plead with him/her?
Now if a person were to wander into a local coillte plantation one would find a nice forest. These trees have been planted by coillte and are growing well. BUT beneath the canopy one will find trees that are growing wild. These trees will be destroyed by coillte when harvesting their taller commercial crop. Not suggesting someone could take a few of these but one never knows... You will often see ash trees that are 10 feet tall growing beneath the canopy.
I planted a nice hedge - I mixed mountain ash, birch, hawthorn, beech, rosa rugosa, hazel, wild pear, wild cherry, dog rose. I absolutely LOVE it, cannot reccommend it highly enough. When trimming the hedge you avoid trimming the odd birch tree as other posters have pointed out.
In years to come these trees will serve as the base of tree houses for your kids/grand kids.
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