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EP299- How To Build A Stock-Proof, Beautiful Hedge That Delivers Fruit, Nuts, And Year-Round Interest
Manage episode 515304200 series 2808027
What if your garden boundary could feed you, shelter wildlife, and still keep a clean line against the field next door? We dive into the art of building an edible hedge that does real work: a thorny native backbone for structure and stock-proofing, layered with fruiting shrubs, nuts, and small trees that lift harvests through the seasons. Starting with hawthorn and blackthorn as the core, we show how holly adds winter presence and bird food, while hazel punctuates the run with future nut crops. Then we take the hedge vertical, spacing crab apple, damson, and standard apples on vigorous rootstocks to rise above the canopy for blossom, colour, and reliable fruit.
From there, it’s all about diversity and placement. We weave in dog rose for hips and habitat, aronia for hardy berries, and elder for flowers and fruit that thrive in hedgerow conditions. Classic soft fruits like raspberries, currants, and blackberries fit in as generous pockets, joined by quince and hardy hybrids such as jostaberry and loganberry. The key is management: avoid boxy clipping, prune after fruiting, and let the hedge breathe so flowering wood stays intact. Expect early nibbles by year two and a full, productive screen by years three to five.
We also share practical sourcing tips for bare-root season, from native hedging bundles to fruit tree choices that handle late frosts. Throughout, the focus stays on function meeting beauty: a boundary that’s tough enough for cattle on the other side, yet alive with blossom, birds, and harvests on yours. If you’re ready to turn a fence line into a food line and a biodiversity corridor, this guide will get you planting with confidence.
Enjoyed the show? Follow, share with a gardener friend, and leave a review to help more growers find us. Got a question or a plant you swear by for hedges? Tell us—we might feature it next time.
If there is any topic you would like covered in future episodes, please let me know.
Email: [email protected]
Check out Master My Garden on the following channels
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/mastermygarden/
Instagram @Mastermygarden https://www.instagram.com/mastermygarden/
Until next week
Happy gardening
John
Chapters
1. Welcome And Listener Question (00:00:00)
2. What Makes A Good Edible Hedge (00:01:45)
3. Stock-Proof Structure With Thorns (00:03:20)
4. Adding Evergreens And Nuts (00:06:00)
5. Letting Hedges Grow For Fruit (00:08:20)
6. Canopy Trees For Extra Harvest (00:11:00)
7. Shrubs And Unusual Edibles (00:14:00)
8. Managing Currants And Canes (00:18:00)
9. Yearly Cycle And Maturity Timeline (00:21:00)
10. Sourcing Bare-Root Plants (00:24:00)
11. Listener Invites And Garden Updates (00:26:30)
303 episodes
Manage episode 515304200 series 2808027
What if your garden boundary could feed you, shelter wildlife, and still keep a clean line against the field next door? We dive into the art of building an edible hedge that does real work: a thorny native backbone for structure and stock-proofing, layered with fruiting shrubs, nuts, and small trees that lift harvests through the seasons. Starting with hawthorn and blackthorn as the core, we show how holly adds winter presence and bird food, while hazel punctuates the run with future nut crops. Then we take the hedge vertical, spacing crab apple, damson, and standard apples on vigorous rootstocks to rise above the canopy for blossom, colour, and reliable fruit.
From there, it’s all about diversity and placement. We weave in dog rose for hips and habitat, aronia for hardy berries, and elder for flowers and fruit that thrive in hedgerow conditions. Classic soft fruits like raspberries, currants, and blackberries fit in as generous pockets, joined by quince and hardy hybrids such as jostaberry and loganberry. The key is management: avoid boxy clipping, prune after fruiting, and let the hedge breathe so flowering wood stays intact. Expect early nibbles by year two and a full, productive screen by years three to five.
We also share practical sourcing tips for bare-root season, from native hedging bundles to fruit tree choices that handle late frosts. Throughout, the focus stays on function meeting beauty: a boundary that’s tough enough for cattle on the other side, yet alive with blossom, birds, and harvests on yours. If you’re ready to turn a fence line into a food line and a biodiversity corridor, this guide will get you planting with confidence.
Enjoyed the show? Follow, share with a gardener friend, and leave a review to help more growers find us. Got a question or a plant you swear by for hedges? Tell us—we might feature it next time.
If there is any topic you would like covered in future episodes, please let me know.
Email: [email protected]
Check out Master My Garden on the following channels
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/mastermygarden/
Instagram @Mastermygarden https://www.instagram.com/mastermygarden/
Until next week
Happy gardening
John
Chapters
1. Welcome And Listener Question (00:00:00)
2. What Makes A Good Edible Hedge (00:01:45)
3. Stock-Proof Structure With Thorns (00:03:20)
4. Adding Evergreens And Nuts (00:06:00)
5. Letting Hedges Grow For Fruit (00:08:20)
6. Canopy Trees For Extra Harvest (00:11:00)
7. Shrubs And Unusual Edibles (00:14:00)
8. Managing Currants And Canes (00:18:00)
9. Yearly Cycle And Maturity Timeline (00:21:00)
10. Sourcing Bare-Root Plants (00:24:00)
11. Listener Invites And Garden Updates (00:26:30)
303 episodes
All episodes
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