@Tarheel1 it’s time for me to plant some trees along my road front for a blind. I know you know your tree guys around the upstate. Who is the best and has the best prices and white size and tree type/breed should I go with. I need something that’s going to bush out and create a good barrier. Thanks buddy
I’m going to plant them myself I’ve got the equipment.
Hey Jimmy,
I’m no Mack but I thought I may also be able to help:
1. My neighbors down the road have mature several foot thick and 15 ft tall bamboo hedges that are along a busy road. They totally block out the visual line of site to the street and also do pretty well with cutting down on the noise. There are many kinds of bamboo and you may realize that some kinds can be hard to control. It would need to do well in your plant hardiness zone, 8a:
2. Though not as good as bamboo against noise since not solid like a curtain, I’ve been using sweet viburnum (SV) as a good backyard privacy hedge for line of site. This apparently may do well in a zone as cold as 8a, but intense cold would probably prune them back. Check the cold hardiness thoroughly!
I wanted to locate some already very tall individual SV plants because I wanted as near to an already made hedge as possible instead of having to wait 2-3 years to mature enough. I bought 6 of them already 7-8 feet tall and they were planted 4-5 feet apart. It still took at least a few months for them to better fill in the thinner areas between plants as well as to get thicker and taller. Mine are sitting near/below taller trees. I think they prefer some shade. Mine are probably 12++ feet tall now.
To find very tall SV, you may need to google it. Whereas there wasn’t much here in nurseries, in central Florida there were several growers growing them in open fields. I paid a local company to dig the holes in advance, go down there, gather the plants, return, plant them, and place pine straw. They also set up drip irrigation in case of a drought early on. Afterwards, they supposedly do much better once well established if there’s a dry period.
To help establish the best hedge, I’d advise you make sure these are properly pruned at appropriate intervals.
Here’s an SV hedge pic: yes they can grow to over 20 feet tall!
