

Only 8 Left
Sold as:

Bulbs
from £5.95


Out of Stock
Sold as:

Potted

Bareroot
from £7.99
14/09/2025
For those who don’t know, asking a farmer is a sensible place to start:
Hedge laying is the art of rejuvenating a hedge to keep it solid and stockproof.
The National Hedgelaying Society has records of over 30 hedgelaying styles, the eleven most common ones are described here.
For wildlife, laying hedges is great long term, however, a freshly laid hedge offers reduced habitat space.
Therefore, your nesting birds will thank you for laying sections of your hedge each year, rather than trying to get it all done at once.
Yes, in most cases. Hedgelaying can cover quite wide gaps, but it can’t work miracles, and sometimes one ideally should put in replacement plants.
Still, things aren’t always ideal, and it’s amazing what value you can get from one pleacher!
Image Copyright Rich Tea
If the wood is flexible enough, you can lay trees as big as you can safely lower to the ground without dropping them.
Image Copyright Evelyn Simak
In this Somerset Hedgelayers video, note that the big tree being laid had been pollarded the year before, as you can see from the twiggy regrowth at the top.
That staggered approach has to be best for the tree’s recovery, but it should be fine to pollard and lay any native tree in the same year.
He efficiently uses the pleacher’s own weight to help pull it down against the strength of the hinge at the base, which needs to be strong enough not to tear.
The brush of branches at the top becomes a support against the ground to hold the laid trunk above horizontal.
The critical comments on this hedge laying in 4 easy steps video are instructive; in our view, they are comparing a perfect world scenario to a “getting stuff done at work” scenario.
Jamie Temple commented, “Centuries of hedgelayers crying at this video. Hate being negative online but this is 100% how not to do it.”
To which we reply:
His hedgelaying memoir is out in 2025, make yourself a tea and check out his insta reels.