What is a good shrub for privacy
20 Fast-Growing Shrubs and Bushes for Privacy
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Don’t want to stare at that ugly block wall next door? Tired of seeing your neighbor taking out the garbage in his pajamas? Plants are the answer! If you don’t have years to wait around, no worries. From hydrangea bushes to lilac bushes and every evergreen in between, many attractive, fast-growing shrubs provide privacy, hide eyesores, and offer food and shelter for pollinators, birds, and other wildlife in a matter of a few seasons.
To ensure your shrub gets a good start, choose varieties that work in your USDA Hardiness Zone. Then dig a hole twice as wide and just as deep as the pot. Rough up the root ball with your hands a bit to help the roots spread out. Backfill the hole, but resist the urge to add peat moss or other organic matter. That’s an outdated practice that actually creates drainage problems (called the “bathtub effect”) which can stunt or kill the plant eventually. Just water and mulch your new shrub, and don’t let it dry out the first season as it gets established. Then enjoy the view!
Here are the best plants for privacy that typically reach their mature size within a few seasons.
1
Arborvitae
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Arborvitae are stately evergreens which come in many different heights, ranging from a few feet to 30 feet tall or more. Most don’t need shearing to maintain their shape.
USDA Hardiness Zones: 3 to 8
Varieties to Try: Green Giant, Spring Grove
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2
Butterfly Bush
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Sometimes called summer lilac, this sturdy shrub with purple flowers withstands drought, blooms all season long, and attracts pollinators. Newer types are not invasive.
USDA Hardiness Zones: 5 to 9
Varieties to Try: Miss Violet, Miss Ruby
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3
Hydrangea
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Hydrangeas are one of the few plants that can be grown from coast to coast in most climates. Some tolerate part shade, but most need a few hours of sun for best blooms. In the hottest regions, give them morning sun and afternoon shade so they don’t fry.
USDA Hardiness Zones: 3 to 10
Varieties to Try: Firelight, Monmar
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4
Elderberry
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Late spring or early summer flowers and attractive foliage make this graceful plant attractive in a mixed border.
USDA Hardiness Zones: 3 to 7
Varieties to Try: Instant Karma, Lemony Lace
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5
Pyracantha
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This vigorous shrub grows upright and boasts clusters of gorgeous fall berries that last well into winter.
USDA Hardiness Zones: 5 to 9
Varieties to Try: Graberi, Kasan
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6
Lilac
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Beautifully-scented lilacs like plenty of sun, but give them a space between plants to let air circulate and reduce the risk of powdery mildew developing. Some types are extremely cold-hardy.
USDA Hardiness Zones: 2 to 8
Varieties to Try: Lavender Lady, Angel White
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7
Forsythia
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You know spring has arrived when the bright yellow forsythia starts blooming! It’s a more moderate grower than some other shrubs but will still reach its mature height relatively quickly.
USDA Hardiness Zones: 3 to 9
Varieties to Try: Meadowlark, Spring Glory
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8
Beautyberry
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Some types of this sun-loving, perennial plant have solid green or variegated green-and-white foliage, but the prettiest variety has dark purple foliage with masses of white blooms in late summer. The real show is the purple berries in fall.
USDA Hardiness Zones: 5 to 8
Varieties to Try: Pearl Glam, Purple Pearls
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9
Ninebark
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This white-flowering native plant is a standout in the garden with its handsome burgundy foliage that lasts all season, topped with creamy white flowers in early summer. The plant is ultra-cold-hardy and has a elegant arching shape.
USDA Hardiness Zones: 2 to 7
Varieties to Try: Diablo, Summer Wine
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10
Loropetalum
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Also called fringe flower due to its beautiful, showy blooms in shades of pink, white and purple, this graceful, vase-shaped shrub reaches maturity relatively quickly.
USDA Hardiness Zones: 7 to 9.
Varieties to Try: Snow Panda, Zhuzhou Fuchsia
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11
Viburnum
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This beautiful evergreen shrub has interesting puckered leaves and pretty white fragrant flowers, followed by showy red fruit.
USDA Hardiness Zones: 5 to 8
Varieties to Try: Allegheny, Prague
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12
Dappled Willow
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The weeping stems of this shrub are pink, with mottled foliage of white, green, and pink. It’s spectacular when massed as a hedge for privacy.
USDA Hardiness Zones: 4 to 10
Varieties to Try: Hakuro Nishiki, Flamingo
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13
Spirea
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This arching shrub boasts a mass of white flowers in spring and colorful orange or reddish foliage in fall. Many types are cold-hardy.
USDA Hardiness Zones: 3 to 7
Varieties to Try: Renaissance, Grefsheim
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14
Red Twig Dogwood
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This multi-stemmed shrub has striking red branches that are stunning in the winter landscape, especially against snow. It’s cold-tolerant, too.
USDA Hardiness Zones: 2 to 8
Varieties to Try: Isanti, Sibirica
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15
Crape Myrtle
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These heat-tolerant and elegant shrubs or small trees have vibrant purple, pink or white flowers in summer. Some varieties have eye-catching peeling bark.
USDA Hardiness Zones: 6 to 9
Varieties to Try: Tonto, Natchez
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16
Serviceberry
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This shrub or small tree is prized for its beautiful orange-red fall color and clusters of white flowers that become deep purple fruits that the birds love.
USDA Hardiness Zones: 4 to 9
Varieties to Try: Glenform, Autumn Brilliance
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17
Mock Orange
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This fountain-shaped shrub with beautiful white flowers has a light citrusy scent and lush green foliage.
USDA Hardiness Zones: 4 to 7
Varieties to Try: Natchez, Belle Etoile
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18
Euonymus
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Many types of this evergreen work well as a clipped hedge, while others look best left to naturalize. Happy in the shade or sun, some varieties have green and gold variegated foliage.
USDA Hardiness Zones: 5 to 8
Varieties to Try: Manhattan, Aureovariegatus
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19
Juniper
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Junipers come in a staggering array of sizes and colors ranging from green to gold. It’s an extremely cold-hardy evergreen that’s not particularly fussy.
USDA Hardiness Zones: 3 to 9
Varieties to Try: Montodd, Spartan
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20
Rose of Sharon
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This reliable summer bloomer boasts exotic-looking flowers of white, pink, purple, or lavender and every shade in between. New varieties grow in a pillar (columnar) shape.
USDA Hardiness Zones: 5 to 9
Varieties to Try: White Pillar, Notwoodthree
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Arricca SanSone Arricca SanSone writes for CountryLiving.com, WomansDay.com, Family Circle, MarthaStewart.com, Cooking Light, Parents.com, and many others.
the top 10 varieties for your yard |
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If you are looking for some of the best shrubs for privacy for a front or backyard, there are many options to choose from that will add color, shelter, and structure to your garden, too.
Along with providing screening from the road or neighboring properties, the best evergreen shrubs can also add color, structure and interest year round.
Using natural barrier options in place of fencing or walls is also among the best wildlife garden ideas for providing habitats and sources of food for a variety of animals, birds and important pollinators.
Best shrubs for privacy
When you're choosing the best shrubs for privacy you'll mostly be landscaping with evergreens due their year round foliage screen, but that's not to say that you can't still include some deciduous shrubs among the planting. Try to envisage how the combination of shrubs will looks throughout the year – some will add differing color, flowers or perhaps seasonal fruit and berries.
If space permits, plant a variety of evergreens and deciduous options, some of which will also be the best fast growing shrubs – particularly useful if you are looking for speedy results.
1. Schip laurel
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'Schip laurel is a compact, evergreen shrub that thrives in partial shade and sun. Highly versatile, it grows to heights of 10-14 feet, making it perfect for privacy,' explains Tammy Sons of Tn Nursery .
Prunus laurocerasus 'schipkaensis', also known as skip laurel, is a great option for shrubs for privacy in zones 5-9. If you have a north facing or shady plot and are looking for shrubs for shade, it copes well in shadier environments.
Smaller growing than other laurels, schip laurel can create a more compact, neat natural privacy screen or privacy hedge when pruned and tolerates many soil types.
2. Inkberry, Ilex glabra
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'Inkberry, Ilex glabra, can grow a beautifully rounded broadleaf evergreen crown. If a tall shrub for privacy is your goal, avoid named varieties, such as ‘densa’, ‘compacta’, and ‘gem box’,' explains Kathleen Connolly, ecological landscape designer and founder of Speaking of Landscapes .
Also known as evergreen winterberry, Appalachian tea tree and gallberry, inkberry is native to eco-regions in the east and southeast US coast, as well as southern maritime Canada.
As with all choices, make sure you know how to plant shrubs to help them to thrive. 'To keep it in top form, plant inkberry where there’s at least moderate soil moisture. It can tolerate light shade as well as full sun. Trim inkberry 6 inches each year to encourage dense leaf coverage up and down the stem,' Kathleen adds.
They are not ones to plant for their flowers, as these are very small, 'but if you plant both male and female inkberries, a host of native birds will thank you for the distinctive blue-black berries midwinter,' Kathleen explains, so the shrub is one to include in your winter garden ideas.
3. Arborvitae ‘Green Giant’
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Arborvitae ‘Green Giant’ is a thick dense evergreen that prefers well-drained, moist and fertile soils. It's a great choice because it is a fast-growing evergreen conifer, ' explains Tammy Sons.
The thick growth offers the best privacy and it can also act as the the perfect backdrop for other flowering varieties of shrubs.
It can grow up to 6-10ft (2-3m) so especially useful for providing a screen from neighboring properties.
4. Mountain laurel, Kalmia latifolia
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If you are looking for shrubs for privacy that also produce beautiful flowers, then the mountain laurel, Kalmia latifolia, is one for the list.
'The large white and pink flowers are a joy to see in June and July,' explains Kathleen, and can be mixed with other flowering shrubs for beautiful, seasonal displays.
Also known as calico-bush, or spoonwood, mountain laurel 'has a reputation as a shade-lover, but it is happier and healthier in part to full sun,' she adds.
Mountain laurel is native to eco-regions of the eastern third of the US and southern Canada.
'Once established, mountain laurel can tolerate drier sites. If you're after plants for privacy from neighbors, avoid varieties bred for low height; if a tall screen is your goal, avoid cultivars bred for low height,' adds Kathleen. You may choose cultivars bred for low height if you're looking for shrubs for the front of the house, however, as these will not block views, but will help increase your home's curb appeal with the summer blooms.
5. Rosebay rhododendron, Rhododendron maximum
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Another flowering candidate for a shrubs for privacy is Rosebay rhododendron, Rhododendron maximum, or American rosebay.
'Native to eco-regions in the eastern third of the U.S. as well as southeastern Canada, this tall shrub displays large white flowers in July. In most locations, this broadleaf evergreen can grow to 15 feet; in the southeastern U.S., it has been known to reach 30 feet,' explains Kathleen.
Rosebay rhododendron thrives in part to full shade, and prefers moist, acidic soil.
6. California privet
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'California Privet is a medium-sized evergreen shrub that requires dry soil,' explains Tammy Sons.
'A fast-growing and reliable shrub that is perfect for fast growing hedges, screens, and windbreaks, Ligustrum ovalifolium can reach heights of 10-12 feet,' she adds.
7. Spotted laurel – Aucuba japonica
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Spotted laurel, also known as Japanese laurel or Aucuba japonica, to give it its botanical name, is a fast grower, reaching up to 15 feet tall. It can tolerate partial or full shade, so is an ideal choice for shrubs for privacy in shady borders or corners.
With attractive spotted, variegated leaves, that can brighten dark areas, it also bears bright red berries in fall that visiting birds will flock to.
The shrub's dense foliage provides a good windbreak, as well as minimizing road noise if used as front garden ideas.
8. Photinia x fraseri
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This lovely evergreen shrub has red, glossy leaves and white flowers in the spring and summer, before maturing to lush dark green foliage.
Photinia x fraseri grows well in full sun to partial shade, and will tolerate normal, clay or chalk soils.
It is a low maintenance shrub for privacy although does not grow as tall as some of the other options, so might be better suited to a front as opposed to a backyard.
9. Forsythia
(Image credit: Getty Images / Katrin Ray Shumakov)
As mentioned, not all shrubs for privacy have to be evergreen, and if you add in a few deciduous varieties into the mix, it will create more interest and color in your garden.
Forsythia is a good option for providing a living privacy wall from spring to fall once they are in flower and leaf, and grow to about 8-10 feet in height. They produce beautiful vibrant yellow flowers in spring, followed by green foliage.
'Hardy in zones 5 to 9, the shrub is requires very little maintenance and can live for many decades,' says Tammy Sons.
Forsythia is considered invasive in some areas, as it can quickly spread, so bear this in mind before planting depending on where you live.
10. Shrubby honeysuckle – Lonicera nitida
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Lonicera nitida, shrubby honeysuckle, or Wilson's honeysuckle, is a fast-growing, hardy evergreen shrub for privacy.
Reaching up to about 11 feet, it's a fairly tall choice, and with densely packed, tiny leaves, it forms a very dense living screen. Added to which it can produce scented off-white flowers in spring and purple-blue berries in fall, so can be a magnet for wildlife, and is pretty to boot.
This shrubby honeysuckle grows well in sun or partial shade, and will tolerate most soil types as long as they are well draining.
What is the fastest growing shrub for privacy?
There are a number of fast growing shrubs for privacy that you can choose if you are keen to establish a natural, living screen as soon as possible.
Shrubby or Wilson's honeysuckle is one fast grower – growing 15-23 inches (40cm and 60cm) per year.
Arborvitae ‘Green Giant’ can grow up to 3 feet per year, as can California privet.
There are many other options you could try, so carefully read the plant description and make sure you plant the chosen shrub in its preferred conditions to maximize its growth rate.
What can I plant to block neighbors' view?
If you want to block your neighbors' view then it is best to choose a tall growing variety of shrub.
The laurels can all reach a good height, with spotted laurel, schip laurel and mountain laurel all growing up to 15 feet given the right conditions.
Also look to some of the best trees for privacy and screening in a backyard if you're looking for tall plants to block neighbors' views from upstairs windows.
Rachel is senior content editor, and writes and commissions gardening content for homesandgardens.com, Homes & Gardens magazine, and its sister titles Period Living Magazine and Country Homes & Interiors. She has written for lifestyle magazines for many years, with a particular focus on gardening, historic houses and arts and crafts, but started out her journalism career in BBC radio, where she enjoyed reporting on and writing programme scripts for all manner of stories. Rachel then moved into regional lifestyle magazines, where the topics she wrote about, and people she interviewed, were as varied and eclectic as they were on radio. Always harboring a passion for homes and gardens, she jumped at the opportunity to work on The English Home and The English Garden magazines for a number of years, before joining the Period Living team, then the wider Homes & Gardens team, specializing in gardens.
Best Retreat Shrubs - Shrubs
Best Retreat Shrubs grow densely, require little maintenance, and completely obscure the view. There are two types of shrubs for privacy: evergreen and deciduous, losing leaves every autumn. Decide which type is best for your yard.
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Suggestions for using shrubs as privacy fences
Some privacy fences grow very quickly while others take time to mature. If you're in a hurry and don't mind spending a lot of time pruning, you should consider faster growing bushes that take root faster.
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will provide complete privacy for several years as they develop.
Slow growing varieties
If you want something that takes time, choose one of these shrubs:
- Berkman's Golden Thuja: This evergreen shrub grows up to five feet tall and is heavily branched. Retains a golden color all year round and does not require pruning.
- Camellia japonica: This is a flowering evergreen plant growing to a height of 12 to 20 feet and a width of 10 to 15 feet. Spent flowers should be removed.
- Emerald Thuja: This evergreen beauty grows up to 15 feet tall and four feet wide. It rarely needs pruning.
- Japanese Yew: This columnar evergreen shrub can grow to 30 feet or more in height. It can be grown in areas with salt fog.
- Saucer Magnolia: Magnolia is deciduous but can be used as a hedge when gathered in groups. If not pruned, it will grow to 20 to 30 feet tall.
Medium growing cultivars
A beautiful shrub with a uniform growth rate may include:
- Dense Yew: This evergreen shrub grows up to six feet tall and spreads widely with dense branches. You can trim it as you wish.
- French Lilac: This deciduous shrub grows 8 to 15 feet tall and will grow slowly as additional shoots grow. It produces fragrant flowers in a wide variety of colors.
- Holly Savannah: This evergreen plant grows 8 to 12 feet tall and six to eight feet wide. The female plants produce the familiar red berries. If desired, this bush can be cut.
- Sweet Olive: This evergreen grows to 10 feet tall and eight feet wide. It is a broad-leaved evergreen with dense branches, and its tiny white inflorescences exude an apricot scent.
- Wax Myrtle: This evergreen shrub is eight feet tall and eight feet wide. It can be cut to the desired shape.
Fast growing varieties
If you want something to grow faster, choose one of the following varieties:
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- Dwarf Pink Almond: This deciduous shrub grows five feet high and four feet wide and bears double pink flowers. It should be pruned every year after flowering.
- Forsythia: Deciduous forsythia can grow up to 10 feet in height when not pruned and is up to 10 feet wide. It produces many small yellow flowers every spring.
- Nikko Blue Hydrangea: This deciduous shrub grows to 12 feet tall and 12 feet wide. It produces large blue flowers in the shape of a snowball. You can cut it off if you wish.
- Northern Bayberry: This bayberry is deciduous, growing up to nine feet tall with dense branches. It is several feet wide, but you can trim it to your liking.
- Red Dogwood: This deciduous shrub is eight feet tall and several feet wide. It is known for its red twigs in winter and creamy white flowers in summer.
Shrub Selection
Deciding which shrub to plant can be a little tricky. Consider the following points to make the right choice.
Shrub Care
If you choose a formal fence, plan to spend time each year shaping the bushes to keep them looking neat and tidy. If you prefer to leave things alone, choose an informal fence that is low maintenance or a combination of shrubs for privacy.
Shrub Location
The location you choose is very important when deciding which plants you will use in your personal fence. Roots grow down and sideways. The larger the plant, the longer the roots will be. This is an important consideration when plants will be located next to a sidewalk, foundation, pool or driveway.
Bush size
When choosing a shrub, be sure to know what the mature size will be. The size of the potted plant may be small compared to what it will look like when fully grown. Most plants in the nursery have tags detailing the care and mature size of each plant. If you are not sure, ask a garden center employee for more information about a particular plant.
Hardiness zone
Your hardiness zone also plays a role in plant selection. Choose plants that will grow well in your area and grow at a rate that suits your maintenance plans. In order for fast-growing bushes to remain good looking, more maintenance will be required. Flowering and deciduous shrubs form debris in summer and autumn.
Make your choice
To select the best bush for your fence, look around to see which bushes already exist. This can help you choose the best plants for your hardiness zone. It's also important to decide if you want to drop the lawn from a flowering or deciduous shrub or low maintenance evergreen. In addition, many bushes even look better in groups than bushes of the same type. Check out your local nurseries in early spring for the best selection, and you'll be on your way to a beautiful privacy fence in no time!
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A cozy corner in the country house and in the garden: photos and ideas for hedges, beautiful fences of bushes and trees in the country house
Turning a site into a secret garden, securely hidden from outsiders, is not so difficult. Of course, you can hide behind a high fence, especially since there are many ways to make it interesting and unusual.
But I propose to create a more romantic image of the secret garden, as if descended from the pages of romantic novels or fairy tales. Places, as if frozen in time - and suddenly discovered; carrying a touch of antiquity and traditions - and at the same time promising new discoveries. This image is most consistent with fences made of "wild" raw stone and hedges.
Dear Garden Associates, Inc.
Outside Landscape Group
A country house hedge is a very flexible and multifunctional way to give the garden a closeness. Thanks to the varying shape and frequency of clipping—and the varied range of hedge plants—a structure can look very different throughout its length. It can be strict or free, linear or curly, its height and degree of transparency can vary.
There are several ways to create a green hedge. They differ from each other not only in appearance and image, but also in the amount of maintenance effort and, of course, in the size of the space required to accommodate them. Choose the one that best suits your abilities, or combine several at once - this will make the image more interesting.
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Amy Martin Landscape Design
Curtains
feral. The image that many aspire to is “design without design”.
Spreading masses of shrubs were a popular technique among the creators of landscape, "English" parks. They made it possible to mask the boundaries of the site and distract from the size of the garden. This technique was especially actively used in urban gardens, which were very limited in area. This time-tested trick is still useful today.
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Princeton Design Collaborative still requires. Although not to the same extent as topiary curly forms. Thickening and rejuvenating pruning will benefit the curtains. It is worth doing it every 2-3 years. Then the shrub will not be exposed from below and will remain dense with a lush, impenetrable crown. In addition, green curtains take up quite a lot of space in width. Therefore, when planting such a hedge, provide space in advance for its growth.
Sheared fence
A sheared fence can use less space for the fence. With the help of a haircut, you will create a solid opaque green wall from the bushes. However, its height and shape may be different.
In general, a sheared hedge looks more strict and whimsical, but it also requires more attention. But, if you take the time and effort, you can create unusual curved or geometric lines and sculptural shapes that will decorate your garden.
Hoi Ning Wong
Idea: Hedges that combine plants with different foliage colors look decorative. They can be alternated, forming stripes, or placed in front of a solid high green fence, a low sheared border with a different leaf color. A high sheared hedge will be an excellent backdrop for standard trees and bushes, as well as for sculpture and all kinds of decor.
Laara Copley-Smith Garden & Landscape Design
Vertical gardening
The currently popular method of decorating hedges with plants provides really wide and varied possibilities for landscaping. You can combine decor with usefulness and plant garden plants and herbs in tiered boxes. Or use mosses, ground cover plants and annuals to create bright and colorful living pictures.
Trellising trees and shrubs
An even narrower hedge can be achieved by shaping trees and shrubs on a trellis. This growing method produces the thinnest of hedges. Transparency will depend on the chosen pattern and formation density. In any case, a trellis fence will be more permeable than other forms of fence, especially in winter. Therefore, you can supplement it with a fence, against which its ornamental pattern will look especially advantageous.
Dear Garden Associates, Inc.
Julie Moir Messervy Design Studio (JMMDS)
Creepers on a trellis
But the fastest way to create a hedge is definitely vines. They will not be leaders in protection from prying eyes, so if you have such a fence around the perimeter of the garden, it is also good to complement it with a fence. But a wall of fast-growing vines will perfectly serve as a screen for zoning the site and will not require much hassle. In a couple of years, your garden will be decorated with lush masses of greenery.
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Dennis Mayer - Photographer
Mix and match just one type of green hedge In a closed enclosed garden, a combination of strict, well-balanced lines looks good - a sheared hedge or a trellis: they create an image of security and reliability, give the impression of free lush masses of vegetation - they will give the atmosphere a relaxed atmosphere.
Plan your layout
Planning your site is a very important step in creating a romantic indoor garden.
And immediately good news for the owners of small plots! It is easier to create an atmosphere of solitude and contemplation in a small space - it seems to have been invented to embody the image of behind-the-scenes closeness. But in this case, do not try to fit everything here at once. In the garden for a serene rest - not a place for fuss. Therefore, if you have a large family and diverse needs, pay attention to thoughtful zoning.
Andrew Renn
Divide a large garden and a garden with a variety of functional tasks into separate closed zones - then there will be a place for all family members and the opportunity to create corners that are completely different in mood.
Advice: Try to keep as far away from each other or as possible isolate areas that involve activity and noisy activity from places of rest and relaxation. For zoning, use all the features of your site: existing and, in particular, planned buildings, terrain, screens and hedges.
Hoi Ning Wong
Consider the house and buildings when zoning
Sometimes - especially on a small plot - it seems that the house takes up too much space. However, any building on the site is an excellent means of zoning, especially when a clear separation of zones is necessary. Buildings make it possible to isolate functionally unrelated sites by placing them in different parts of the site. Moreover, they provide not only visual separation, but also create a barrier to noise and fuss. So, if you can't make your entire garden the focus of silence, set aside one of the zones for privacy, securely protected by a house or other buildings.
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Use the Garden as a Hiding Place
Old trees (ideally evergreen) with spreading branches and soft, relaxed shade under them will help separate the secluded recreation area from the noisy part of the site. Especially if you complement it with shrubs, which will act as additional visual and acoustic protection.
Divide the plot with screens
If it is not possible to arrange a buffer zone that separates a secluded corner, place a cozy seating area with your back to the walkable and bustling areas of the site and close it with a screen.
Screens are an excellent zoning element that works both in the interior and in the landscape. They do not take up much space and do not look overly heavy, but allow you to visually separate the zones. Garden screens can be both stationary and traditionally mobile. Use hedges, decorative fences and lattices to divide the garden space in the form of small fragments.
The Garden Builders
Troy Rhone Garden Design
Use gates for walkways
If you're designing a small enclosed area, use the decorative possibilities of walkways, gates and skylights. Let them immediately set the mood at the entrance to the zone, attract with mystery, invite you to look inside. Decorate the passage with vines - climbing roses, princes and clematis twining the gate look very romantic. Or arrange a passage to a secluded area with a pergola.
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Create intrigue
Let some accent touch, interesting and intriguing, be seen through the passages or the gate. Whether it will be a brightly flowering flower bed, or a shrub with unusually colored foliage, a sculpture or a fountain - it should create a contrast with the space located outside, should promise a new intriguing image, promise a new relaxing atmosphere.
B. Gordon Builders, Inc.
Sutton Suzuki Architects
Set up spaces for privacy
Cozy backstage spaces will complement the privacy of a secret corner in your garden - or replace it if there is still no place for a dedicated secluded area.
- Pergola can also act as a sheltered area. Place soft sofas under it - and a relaxing seating area, closed from the fuss and prying eyes, is ready.
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This is not a gazebo: A pergola in your garden
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- Pavilions also traditionally help to create a cozy local recreation area. And if you add vines, plant lush shrubs around and place in the back of the site - the gazebo will become a place of solitude that does not take up too much space. Textiles will also be very useful for giving privacy - both as a decor and addition to the gazebo, and as a replacement for it.
- A gazebo doesn't have to be traditional - tree house can be an unusual retreat. Who didn't dream of this as a child?
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Garden corner: Pergola or patio, terrace or armchair?
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- Creeper-covered swing or bench – a gazebo in miniature. Place them as a decoration and a relaxing element in a dedicated, enclosed corner of your garden, or entrust them with the role of a secluded hiding place.
Advice: When placing a pergola, pergola or swing, complement the overall closeness with open areas. Let the cozy gazebo overlook the wide plane of the lawn or pond. Such a contrast will create serenity and give rest to the eyes.
Fill your garden with details
Turn your nook into a garden box, closed from the outside, but full of interesting details and experiences.
Use decorative lighting to create different lighting scenarios and whimsical light scenes, such as illuminating shrubs, trees and flower beds. Or decorate them with garlands for a touch of magic.
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Lenkin Design Inc: Landscape and Garden Design
Place an object for contemplation in the secret garden - be it a sculpture, a fountain, a plant arrangement or a rock garden. The main thing is that any of them will help you get distracted, switch your thoughts, provide rest for your eyes and create the right mood.
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Cherry Blossom: Hanami, or the Art of Cherry Blossom Viewing
Add nuanced details, little surprises, unexpected objects found in thickets and flower beds. Place fabulous images in the garden that will fill it with a very special atmosphere, so that when you come there, you can immerse yourself in your world, different from the surrounding reality. Therefore, when planning a secret garden, think about what image you want to immerse yourself in. It doesn't have to be the old romantic garden I suggested.