How to Plant Fast Growing Evergreen Trees for Privacy

Some trees remain the same during all season but some tress change in winter spring summer and
autumn

So let’s see how many types of trees are there.
There are two major types of trees there are evergreen and deciduous trees. Evergreen trees maintain their leaves all year. Deciduous trees misplace their leaves in autumn and winter

Let’s look at each one  

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Evergreen vs. Deciduous trees 

First there are evergreen tresses they are the same all year. They are always green. They always keep
their leaves. That means in spring they have green leaves as well as summer autumn and winter as well.

They are green all season and never lose their leaves.
Deciduous trees changes with season. They drop their leaves. In spring new leaves raise. In summer the tree has all its leaves seeds and fruits in autumn the leaves alter its color and the leaves fall to the land.

This is the losing its leaves then in winter the tree has no leaves but it spring it starts all over again.
Deciduous tree is a tree whose leaves fall off every year either due to winter cold or dry season. An
evergreen tree is a tree that although it does lose its leaves and needless throughout the year. It is
constantly growing new leaves and needles so it remains green year round.

Examples

Flat wood plum, maple tree, Hercules club, pig nut hickory, winged elm are some of the examples of
deciduous trees. They lose their leaves every year
Southern live oak (which has oval-shaped leaves), English oak (shaped leaves), slash pines, southern red ceder are some of the examples of evergreen trees.
How to plant an evergreen hedge for privacy

Steps 1 – you will need some hedge plants, a spade a garden fork, manure, string, and some steaks and a watering can or hose.

Step 2-  Choose your Hedge
You can buy hedges in containers from garden centers or nurseries. Look for a plant with healthy
undergrowth and moist fertilizer. If you buy a hedge without mud around, the roots known as bare
rooted. Then it should be planted in the latent season between  November and March. If it has been
grown in a bud vase, plant it in April so that it can be established before the beginning of winter.

Step 3- Positioning - Hedges like boxwood are normally open to the elements as they are used as borders and you often simply have to place them where they are necessary.

Step 4- Organize the soil - Thoroughly fork over the soil and get rid of any weeds or gravel from the site. Spade abundance of compost onto the surface of the soil and divide it in, to guarantee a rich bed for planting. Use a part of string tied between two stakes to make sure you are planting in a straight line. Then dig a channel next to your line. Your trench should be to some extent deeper than the root ball of your plants. Use a garden fork to pierce out the sides and bottom of the hole, and to break up the even surface formed by the spade.  This would encourage the routes to grow outwards and help the rain to be in motion all the way through the soil.

Step 5 – Planting -Your plant needs to be planted at 50-centimetre intervals. If the plant is positioning too towering or short you need to put in or remove some mud. Remove the plant from its container or tub. Make sure all the roots are underneath the surfaces and that bottom of the branch is not covered as this can cause rot. Restock the channel with soil fertilizer mix that you removed and gently firm it up with your heel once it
reached the accurate height.

Step 6-  Water - Thoroughly water in your recently planted hedge, although you can be badly damaged by water logging it mustn’t dry out either. Water regularly spring -summer and autumn especially when it’s particularly dry.

Done! 

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