I wish we had this tradition in the US. But we aren’t old enough. There might be some in New England, but I think it’s mostly stone walls. Here in Kentucky in the Bluegrass region a lot of the old horse farms are separated by natural stone wall too. Locust trees could be made use of for hedgerows here as well as Holly
I've done a couple on my property in Michigan. Got interested in it after seeing it in the UK from a train and after watching a few videos I have it a go. I get endless positive feedback from people walking by. Labor intensive but worth every drop of sweat!
Osage Orange was the most planted tree species in the US for about 100 years before barbed wire was invented. Within 5 years it grows horse high, bull strong and hog tight. The US has a fantastic history of ingenuity and craftsmanship.
Thank you for sharing your experience. I have to start a new hedge. how do you start from scratch? What would you recommend as plants? Our soil is rich in clay. Thanks.
Hedges will grow upward. To be stockproof , after all thats thair purpose, you need to lower your angle .that will tighten the job up and avoid wind rocking the cuts.otherwise nice tidy binding. Or heathering as we call it in bucks
Just another example of nature provides. it’s amazing the skills that were passed on since the Neolithic times I am an American of British descendants , and not only the major contributions the British people have given to the world, but the simple ancient ones as well. It is a precursor to mankind accomplishments from that age. On.
Having a multi layered hedge or a screen planting actually reduces fire risk as it catches stray embers, and shields against radiant heat. You want something that is relatively dense for shielding, but still not too dense as to allow airflow through the trees otherwise wind will blow over instead of through which is what you want. Contrary to popular belief there are plenty of native plants that work well for this. If you want something like traditional hedgerow like the ones with spikey hawthorn without planting actual hawthorn since it's pretty weedy here, cockspur thorn is a fantastic plant. It produces abundant edible fruit (it's related to figs and mulberry), it's native, it's fire retardant, and would be great as a protective hedge and at keeping livestock in, as well as being a great habitat plant. In fact it's close and more well known relative osage orange has been used for the same purpose. The plants are long lived too. Less spikey options could be something like salt bush, it's great stock fodder, won't burn, some species are edible for humans too. Other natives that are resilient can be plants like brachyciton species like kurrajong, kangaroo apple, even certain wattles as long as they haven't died, those are a few options.
Hedge laying is a tradition that should be mandatory for all farms especially roadside, the way farmers are obliterating hedges in Ireland with flails is a disgrace, they should be fined minimum €2000 for every hedge on each field, or given some incentive to lay the hedging,
@@colmanlong1032 cut the hedges then.... Properly without destroying them, no one is forced to do anything, farmers are greedy hores cheaper way is the best, regardless of how much damage is done.. They make the decision to take the action they do, they should then suffer the consequences.
Too much physical labor that will end up making us skinny. :) Beautiful work. I wish I knew about this early on while working my property. As an American, it's not the norm here. We love ugly barbed wire.
I think it’s obvious. You have had a lifetime of experience in another field, your blows, feel and touch, indeed everything is not a natural flow. As I said, an amateur at work! Live with it and stop moaning because you’ve been found out.
None of these countryside skills should be lost, I would rather have a livestock barrier like this than modern materials
Yes, but Labour cost?
but almost $0 material cost
@@davidhorn6008 hard work for centuries of benefit. Plus I believe the benefit to the wildlife more than pays for itself
Some of the hedgerows are over 900 years old.
I wish we had this tradition in the US. But we aren’t old enough. There might be some in New England, but I think it’s mostly stone walls. Here in Kentucky in the Bluegrass region a lot of the old horse farms are separated by natural stone wall too. Locust trees could be made use of for hedgerows here as well as Holly
I've done a couple on my property in Michigan. Got interested in it after seeing it in the UK from a train and after watching a few videos I have it a go. I get endless positive feedback from people walking by. Labor intensive but worth every drop of sweat!
what species did you use for your hedge in Michigan? Hawthorn?
Osage Orange was the most planted tree species in the US for about 100 years before barbed wire was invented. Within 5 years it grows horse high, bull strong and hog tight. The US has a fantastic history of ingenuity and craftsmanship.
A billhook is ideal for this kind of work.
Thank you for sharing your experience. I have to start a new hedge. how do you start from scratch? What would you recommend as plants? Our soil is rich in clay. Thanks.
Hedges will grow upward. To be stockproof , after all thats thair purpose, you need to lower your angle .that will tighten the job up and avoid wind rocking the cuts.otherwise nice tidy binding. Or heathering as we call it in bucks
Lol ya im pretty sure he knows what he doing
@@jayuppercase3398 I'm sure he does. The decision is whether u're looking for pretty or practical. Lol
I would agree they should be lower.
Good man, Eoin!
Wow! So cool. I'm in Canada
Bloody champions
Try using a side axe as this gives a far better finish when cutting approx 3/4 lb
Never saw that done before
Just another example of nature provides. it’s amazing the skills that were passed on since the Neolithic times I am an American of British descendants , and not only the major contributions the British people have given to the world, but the simple ancient ones as well. It is a precursor to mankind accomplishments from that age. On.
I'm in Australia. Want to do bigtime. Going to have to think really hard about what plant to use and where to put
I’m in Australia too, I’d love to do this but would be worried about the fire risk. I imagine it wouldn’t be as bad as a dead hedge though.
@@janewood8665 would depend what plants U used. Something less flammable than the local plants. I'd be concerned about it turning into a weed problem.
@@fourgedmushrooms5958 definitely needs some thought but I’m up for it for sure!
Having a multi layered hedge or a screen planting actually reduces fire risk as it catches stray embers, and shields against radiant heat. You want something that is relatively dense for shielding, but still not too dense as to allow airflow through the trees otherwise wind will blow over instead of through which is what you want.
Contrary to popular belief there are plenty of native plants that work well for this.
If you want something like traditional hedgerow like the ones with spikey hawthorn without planting actual hawthorn since it's pretty weedy here, cockspur thorn is a fantastic plant. It produces abundant edible fruit (it's related to figs and mulberry), it's native, it's fire retardant, and would be great as a protective hedge and at keeping livestock in, as well as being a great habitat plant. In fact it's close and more well known relative osage orange has been used for the same purpose. The plants are long lived too.
Less spikey options could be something like salt bush, it's great stock fodder, won't burn, some species are edible for humans too. Other natives that are resilient can be plants like brachyciton species like kurrajong, kangaroo apple, even certain wattles as long as they haven't died, those are a few options.
What should one do about a bustle in the hedgerow?
Don't be alarmed
Might be just someone doing a bit of spring cleaning
Hedge laying is a tradition that should be mandatory for all farms especially roadside, the way farmers are obliterating hedges in Ireland with flails is a disgrace, they should be fined minimum €2000 for every hedge on each field, or given some incentive to lay the hedging,
You are forced by the county councils to cut the hedges,so don't be blaming the wrong people.
@@colmanlong1032 cut the hedges then.... Properly without destroying them, no one is forced to do anything, farmers are greedy hores cheaper way is the best, regardless of how much damage is done.. They make the decision to take the action they do, they should then suffer the consequences.
@@jahpedro3971 couldn't give 1 f ck what u experts do.
@@colmanlong1032 🙄 ....awwwww... Conversation to much for you? Yes I am an expert on such things, thank you for pointing that out.
@@jahpedro3971 you spending too much time in the fog
Too much physical labor that will end up making us skinny. :) Beautiful work. I wish I knew about this early on while working my property. As an American, it's not the norm here. We love ugly barbed wire.
Very nice way to fence. Stay close to Jesus. (Old guy from Arkansas)🇺🇸
You can always tell an amateur at work.
Meaning?
I think it’s obvious. You have had a lifetime of experience in another field, your blows, feel and touch, indeed everything is not a natural flow.
As I said, an amateur at work!
Live with it and stop moaning because you’ve been found out.
Beats me how people work with massive gloves and a hard hat with visor to cut some very young hedging.
@@seemoorewell the gloves i can understand, but the hard had i'm agreeing with you
@@davidbarnes241elaborate