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Hedge cutting and wildlife....

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  • Hedge cutting and wildlife....

    Because of the rough weather lately I'm well behind with hedge trimming this year (not for the first time....) but am reminded that RSPB request no (major/power-tool) hedge-trimming or coppicing be undertaken from March 1st to late Summer (exact dates vary in different regions) in order to protect birds during their nesting/breeding season.

    So under 3 weeks left to get that job finished.... "So many jobs, so little time!"

    The RSPB: Conservation: Other rules for hedge trimming
    .

  • #2
    I hate to see all the hedges hacked away. Round here they were "Cutting" the hedgerow way back in the late Autumn. Which I thought was mad because that's when all the berries etc are ripening for the birds . But that's the council for ya

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    • #3
      lol, well I'm not exactly a council, g-n, more a struggling solo gardener but I know what you mean... Can't say my results are ever "square" or even exactly "neat" but I find border hedges do need some attention once a year (and a fair bit of mine is hawthorn which is mighty spiteful, an ancient tactic to deter intruders and mighty effective! ) As to the best time I agree that's worthy of a debate... Many people including farmers round here (North Midlands) seem to trim them in autumn once growth has slowed but there is a wildlife case for leaving until February (I tell myself every Autumn...) as they provide more secure sites for winter wildlife including insects which provide more food + berries etc. But for me tidying up the hedges is a sure sign that Spring is just about ready to spring..... And quite what to do with the heap of needle-sharp or evergreen cuttings the first imponderable of the new season.
      .

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      • #4
        It's interesting that here in France hedges between houses have to be maintained as a certain height - it's actually an offence (no puns please) to have one about 2 metres and the hedges also have to be 2 metres from the boundary line, effectively a 4 metre space, to ensure that the hedges can be cut.

        The hedge between us and our neighbours is way high atm and I have to cut it but I know it's full of birds nests. As I'm on the Council, it's unlikely that anything would be said and they're only in the house 6 weeks of the year, but I also should set an example.

        But it's a loose-loose as far as I'm concerned, I really don't want to upset the nests but I don't really have an option, just delay for another week if I can.
        TonyF, Dordogne 24220

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        • #5
          Tony,

          I think you will find that here in good old blighty there is some sort of bylaw that prohibits hedge or fence over 2 mtrs between dwellings.

          Colin
          Potty by name Potty by nature.

          By appointment of VeggieChicken Member of the Nutters club.


          We hang petty thieves and appoint great ones to public office.

          Aesop 620BC-560BC

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