eMail coming in with hedge questions would amaze you with
the volume
The main questions are about ficus hedges and "WHAT NOW
COACH" pleadings as the ficus hedge gets out of control, or loses leaves
down low or starts breaking up walkways and driveways
Folks who have not yet planted ficus are interested in
alternative plants
What everyone seems to neglect is maintenance. No matter what hedge plant you select, you
must prune for shape and prune for height.
This pruning will never stop, especially in warmer zone 9 and zone 10 climates where hedges
start looking unkempt after just 6 weeks or so (after the last pruning)
Most folks in Florida hire hedge cutters (usually their lawn
maintenance crew) to handle the pruning
Here's the point >>> it would not be unusual for a
homeowner to spend $1,000, $2,000, even $3,500 a year to prune that hedge (and
feed it, and water it)
10 years = $10,000 or $20,000 or $35,000
With those kinds of maintenance dollar numbers on the table,
a fence makes more and more sense
A "best of both worlds" idea would be a sturdy and
tall chain link fence where you plant vines to grow on the fence

The advantages are many…
1. No pruning or
just once-a-year pruning (saves a bundle of cash)
2. You select a vine
whose blooms you enjoy so you get color
3. You can have low
plants at the bottom of your fence and have the vines covering the rest so you
get excellent privacy, foliage and color
4. You could have
more than one kind of vine, so if you have a long fence, you could have
sections of different colors
5. You are a good
neighbor (whereas hedges encroach on your neighbors' property)
6. When you sell
your home, buyers like fences
7. Hedges keep
getting wider and wider over time. This
way, you have a thin line and no branches crowding you out of walking beside
your home or by your pool
8. If you change
your mind with a hedge, it's expensive and semi-destructive to remove
9. Hedges really
don't produce blooms/flowers/color because with every pruning you are cutting
off branch tips from which flowers would form, hence, plants like hibiscus
sound great (for flowers) but in practice, you get almost no flowering
10. Fences are real
barriers, e.g. kids, dogs, iguanas are kept where you want them to be
11. Vines are
planted typically at 6-10 foot intervals so you pay way less for plant material
and vines grow WAY WAY faster than hedge plants so you get privacy coverage the
first year
12. Replacing the
vines is cheap too if you decide to redecorate outdoors
Cya