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Beech - Fagus sylvatica
- Shrub / Tree

Beech - Fagus
sylvatica - is a magnificent specimen tree, that needs a lot of space to be
grown as such.
It also takes very
well to being grown as a hedging plant producing superb hedges that can be used
in formal or informal settings. Beech hedges make effective windbreaks and sort
of span the evergreen / deciduous boundary as whereas they are deciduous, they retain
the dead leaves on the branches through the winter until they are pushed off by
new shoots in the spring time. They are not completely bare and twiggy therefore
when grown as a hedge.
Beech is
most commonly available as the species with bright green leaves in spring that darken
towards summer before turning copper in the autumn, they then turn brown over winter
if they are retained which only happens when used as hedging, large tree forms lose
most or all of the leaves in the winter.
Beech also comes as purple beech
or Fagus sylvatica Atropurpurea which is often also used as hedging either
alone or mixed in with the native type, the leaves colour in the autumn and are
also retained over the winter if the plant is used as hedging.
Several cultivars of the tree are
also available as weeping or columnar forms such as Aurea pendula - a weeping form
to 30ft tall by 5ft wide with vivid yellow leaves in spring maturing to green or
Dawyck Gold (to 60ft x 22ft) and Dawyck Purple (to 70ft x 15ft) both
narrowly upright trees that are gold and purple leaved respectively.
Beeches have smooth grey bark which
is one of the best surfaces for carving lovers hearts and initials. The plants are
monoeiceous being either male or female and so will have either male catkins in
spring or female trees will produce beechnuts in the autumn.
When planting, incorporate plenty of organic matter
into the soil and stake well if it is a large specimen to be grown as a tree.
To grow as a hedge, bare rooted "whips" from around
18"-24" (45-60cm) tall are best planted in the dormant season from late autumn to
early spring, again incorporate plenty of organic matter.
Height and spread:
Tree
25m x 15m (80ft x 50ft) | Hedge
1-6m high (4-20ft)
full sun or partial shade, dark
leaved better in sun, yellow leaved better in partial shade
fairly unfussy, will grow well in
chalky and well drained soils
medium
April to May, wind pollinated
and not showy
Autumn colour
fully hardy
Uses - Hedging or
as a woodland or specimen tree
|
Planting distance when
used for hedging
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Clipped height |
Number of times to clip per season and
when |
Responds to renovation? |
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30-60cm, 12-24"
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1-6m, 4-20ft
|
1, late summer, renovate in winter |
Yes |
| Pruning:
Usually requires minimal pruning if trained as a tree, remove low lateral
branches later on after 5 years if necessary, early removal can result
in developing competing leaders. |
|
Buy Beech - singles |
Hedging 10 pack
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Q. I have a beech hedge
approx 8ft high. What is the best time to prune it back and do you advocate
the method of cutting back on one side the first year, and then cut back the
other side the following year. I also want to reduce the height, what is you
advice on going about this task?
A.
It depends on how drastically you wish to cut the hedge back.
For general maintenance of a beech hedge, two trims a year are fine, once in
midsummer and once when dormant during the winter months.
If the hedge is very overgrown then any major pruning should
take place in midwinter. Leave it until then if you want to take more than about
2 feet off the height of the hedge involving cutting back into larger established
branches.
The cutting one side at a time approach is only necessary
for drastic pruning. If you want to reduce the width by cutting into large established
branches, then do opposite sides on alternate years. If the cutting back only
involves young twiggy growth, then it's not really necessary.
Q. My beech hedge is approximately five feet
high and 25 yards long but it is very thin and sparse. How do I turn it into
a thick hedge?
A. I would guess that your hedge has been allowed
to grow upwards pretty much since it was planted and so the plants are trying
to do what comes naturally i.e. grow like trees.
You need to stimulate it to produce more side shoots and bushy growth rather
than going upwards. This is done by pruning to stimulate new growth.
Beech should be given only moderate pruning. Vigorous leaders and laterals
should shortened by no more than one third of their length. Weaker growth can
be cut by up to two thirds of its length. By the sounds of it this will take
you some time to go down the full length of the hedge, I'd prioritise the leaders
first and then go back and do the rest a bit at a time.
It would also be a good idea to fork in some fertiliser after the pruning,
gromore or blood, fish and bone are good slow release fertilisers.
Q.
My beech hedge is about 8ft high.
The hedge backs onto a wood so it is completely bare on that side. The front
of the hedge is 4-5ft wide. I wish to reduce the height by 2ft and the width
(at the front) by 2-3ft. If I cut the front by this much, all of the buds will
be cut off. If I cut off all of the buds, would new growth sprout next year
(as happens with pollarded lime trees for instance). Your advice would be very
much appreciated.
A. Beech responds well to hard pruning
and renovation, and your proposed cuts are less drastic than that. If you cut
the buds off, it will obviously be a little later than normal, but will recover.
In order to make up for the treatment a good mulch and a feed of a slow-release
fertiliser such as blood fish and bone after pruning will help to get it growing
away strongly come the spring.
Q.
How do you grow a new beech hedge, from seed or cutting ? how old are the
bare root plants you see for sale ?
A. The easiest way is from seed,
the plants should be big enough when they're about 2 years old assuming they've
been grown in an outdoor seedbed in at least partially sunny conditions.
Q.
I have a mature copper beech tree (easily 30 years plus) which is showing
signs of poor health. It is displaying what I can only describe as a white film
over the leaves and the tree itself even throughout the Summer did not
have much foliage. Can you recommend fungicide pesticide? Is it mildew?
A. It's difficult to say without seeing it,
but it does sound like some kind of fungus, most probably powdery mildew to
which beech are susceptible. It's really too late to do much about it now as
the leaves will have fallen off or be about to, so it's a case of good hygiene
ready for next year.
Scrub the trunk and other patches with a brush and Jeye's Fluid as far as
you can reach once the leaves have fallen off. Gather the leaves as far as possible
and either burn them or take them down the tip, at least get rid of them out
of the garden. Whatever it is it will almost certainly re-appear next year as
you won't have got rid of all traces, so at the first sight spray the leaves
with a systemic fungicide and repeat at 2-3 week intervals or according to the
instructions.
Q.
I would like advice on the best treatment for "Beech Scale" on a
new purple beech hedge. The underneath of many leaves are covered in white fluffy,
sticky wool like substance.
A. You need to spray with a systemic insecticide
- one that is taken into the leaf and delivered along with the food to the scale
insects. The fluffy coat helps protect them from all manner of contact insecticides
whether organic or not.
Q. I would like a tall beech hedge 7 foot high.
Which is the quickest way to achieve this- buying smaller plants and waiting
or buying taller (and more expensive ones) initially.
Will the taller plants available for sale be tall but not bushy? And will I
have to trim the tall plants when I've planted them?
A. There is a very quick answer to this
question which is that you will have great difficulty in buying tall beech
hedging anywhere - if at all.
The best way is to wait until the autumn and then buy bare-rooted hedging
plants. They should 1-2 years old and you may as well buy the largest you
can as it is the youth rather the size that is the important thing. If beech
hedging is left beyond this it starts to grow into a beech tree. Don't trim
them until at least the late summer following the winter that you plant
them.
Q. My beech hedge is 7tf tall and 30yrs old.
Several feet in length of the spring leaves have turned a very dark
greeny/brown, new leaf growth on the same stem is still the normal light
green. the hedge was sprayed as normal in late spring for white fly.3
year ago we removed a mountain ash from near by due to honey fungi what do
you think the problem can be.
A. Difficult to say without seeing it.
So the older ones of this years leaves have shrivelled? Sounds to me like
the effect of the sun/heat that we've been getting this summer, I have a few
plants in my own garden that have suffered in a similar way.
Keep an eye on them , but in the meantime I'd give the plants a bit of a
treat to try and build them up a bit, give a good long drink with a soluble
fertiliser and apply a good deep mulch around the base of the trunk.
It could be the honey fungus, check the trunks for any signs, but I think
the weather is probably more likely to blame.
Q. We planted a copper beech hedge earlier
this year, it has taken off really well, I have read about pruning on your
site, but please tell me what 'renovation' means and entails.
A. Renovation as applied to plants is
pretty much what it is when applied to houses. It's what you do to old
established plants that are fundamentally sound, but are showing the effects
of age and some neglect. As such, you probably won't need to worry about it
with your hedge for a few decades and not even then if you look after it
properly.
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