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New Hedge with neighbour (near boundary wall)

Joined
8 Mar 2014
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United Kingdom
Hello,

My new neighbours being a bit anti-social (using their front garden as a car repair centre) we've decided the best course of action is to create a small Yew hedge boundary. There's a small wall acting as the boundary, single brick about 600cm high and the length of the front garden is around 4m. Eventually the hedge would need to be about 1.5 - 1.8 cm high and about 60cm thick. We didn't want it too thick to avoid it encroaching too much into the front garden.

The question is: Is there a hard and fast rule about how close shrubs should be planted to the wall to allow sufficient growth but avoiding impacting on the wall itself?

Thanks.
 
Just remember that when it grows over the wall into your neighbours garden they can and probably will trim it back to the boundary
 
Thank you. Any thoughts on distance from building from the neighbouring wall?
 
There can be no hard and fast rule, because different plants have differing root systems, and different walls are built with different foundations.
Yew is slow growing, so I think you wouldn't have a problem catching it before it affects your wall. If you want to be certain about it, you could proactively trim the roots on the wall side.
 

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