Thank you very much for explaining this so clearly. It is very helpful, and I can see that I must make some amendments to my treatment of the small box hedging I have been establishing this year in order to try to avoid any problems. I had no idea about the danger of watering from above, for example. Thanks, again.
Thank you so much for such helpful informative information. I have found many USA gardeners (professional and like myself not lol) do not know how to care for boxwoods. Blight attacked and the beautiful plants & high investment is lost. Many landscapers say remove them, clean soil, burn soil then replant new plants with new soil. People who have done this have the blight to attach the new plants. Never heard about the pruning the inside (logical) for circulation of air and light. And not water the plant itself just the soil. I can't thank you enough. At this point I feel English gardeners are more familiar, versed and successful with boxwood that those in the USA.
Fantastic alternative to Box is Lonicera Nitida. Similar leaf form, totally bomb proof, can be topiarised to whichever shape is desirable & never gets any diseases that I've ever been able to determine. Bonus of the tiny but highly lovely lemon scented flowers in Spring & tiny purple berries in Autumn. Used in Wales a lot.
Apologies for late response. Many thanks for your comments , what I love about gardening is we all hit it from a different view point and one size definitely does not fit all. But I reckon you must have strong arms and patience. ! I know people that cut lonicera nitida hedges 6 times a year to keep them trim, sorry it would drive me bonkers. If you leave it uncut to get flowers and berries it would look worse than me on a bad hair day!
@@bunnyguinness 🤣🤣🤣 Yes, definitely different strokes for different folks. Flowers and berries are a good excuse for those of us who are either a little on the lazy side, (guilty), or for those whose gardening style is a little more relaxed. I really loved your idea of cutting the bottom out of pots but can see why friends and family laugh. Bunny spends a small fortune on terracotta pots, then cuts the bottom out! I've done something similar with drainpipe connectors to raise the soil level in a pot without disturbing bulbs already planted because I wanted to plant a Lobelia on top. Sounds hideous but is soon covered by foliage.
@@bunnyguinness Your very gracious but unexpected reply set my [two] 🧠 cells twitching. Those H20 tanks would make great H20 features if one couldn't be bothered with expensive fiddly hole prone pond liners. Since you have to dig a hole anyway, would just require lateral thinking & McGyver skills. Also could 🐝 used to create a quick terraced effect & or large central feature in courtyards/large driveways (no fiddly brickwork etc). For a central feature use 1 tank as central starting point. For each successive tank dig down, line hole with geotextile & 25-30ml gravel (avoids sump formation), leaving ~5-7" between the top of 1 tank & the next. Can 🐝 symmetrical, offset or whatever is appropriate. Could also be used to avoid expensive time consuming level adjustments in a sloping areas, particularly where access is limited/awkward. Plant with small trees (esp. flowering ones), large shrubs, hardy Cyclamen, Spring bulbs etc. Quite like the idea of Acers & or Magnolias underplanted with dwarf Azalea but the list is endless & like with any type of container planting, soil/compost can🐝 adapted to suit plant choice allowing for a wide range in a small space. A designer such as yourself could come up with some spectacular choices. What's that tree designers like to use that looks like a tiered wedding cake, especially when it flowers; variety of Cornus or Viburnum? Now that combined with Acers could look fab. Careful plant selection could give flowers 12mths of the year. Daphne's & Witch-hazel to brighten a winter's day.
Thank you for this video. I have had box for years and this year I pruned a bit harshly and it probably rained before or after and voilà, I now have box blight. Top Buxus was recommended to me and I have clipped out the bad parts and done a couple of sprays. It's super easy. Things are looking better, but it's not gone yet. Also, I am moving the day lilies which are right beside it and blocking air flow and putting three large pots with standards of some kind there instead. I have put mulch on one side (we can't get the Top Buxus brand here🇨🇦) and will put it down after removing the lilies. I plan to prune inside my newly purchased ones as they are really packed with branches. Thanks for your help and encouragement! 🤞🏼
Found your video. Very informative, thank you. I actually have literally been struck with caterpillers. Am not green fingered so have only just learnt what has happened. Just been spraying bug spray over last couple of nights but I think I'm not a good enough gardener to save 6 out of 8 buxus. Will attempt to cut into hedge to get light into them and add the mulch you suggested. Thank you again.
i guess Im asking randomly but does any of you know of a method to get back into an Instagram account..? I was dumb lost the login password. I would appreciate any tricks you can offer me!
@Sam Dustin Thanks so much for your reply. I found the site on google and I'm trying it out atm. Looks like it's gonna take quite some time so I will get back to you later with my results.
I really like watching your videos because I learn so much. Lots of practical tips! May I please ask how far apart you plant your box plants to keep them at 1-2 ft high? Thank you.
Please do more on boxwood. I think I’m killing my bare root plants that I bought off some lad a few months ago. Now I’m worried about my older box hedge.
If you are in the uk and you planted the bare root ones in that really hot dry period we had it might be that you did not water enough initially to get them established?🐇
I have a shared hedge which was OK until my next door neighbour decided to use a leaf-blower to clear the leaves from under the hedge and their pathway. The following few days the leaves suddenly started to turn yellow and fall off! So I think the problem is the way we cut hedging which leads to dense foilage around the perimeter and the buildup of fungus spores inside -- the same way black spores develop in the corners of a poorly ventilated, damp room. So a possible solution, which you've touched upon, is to improve ventilation inside via selective pruning and to give it a weekly airing in severe cases via a leaf blower during October and November especially when it's mild and damp.
I have used XenTari, Top Buxus and Provado to protect my box from box tree moth caterpillar, but it has to be applied several times a year and is an ongoing battle. You must need tons of it!
Hi @Bunny Guinness +Bunny Guinness ... wondering at 0:44 seconds in th video... what type of hedge is that on the background? Sseems like some type o arborvitae or Thuja? I have been looking into having exactly that type of hedge but have no idea of its name
Thanks for the video, it’s really helpful and addresses the dreaded problem of blight in a simple easy to understand approach with options. I also really like watching the design videos you have done, interesting ideas for layouts and structure. I’ve used the Top Buxus but it’s just not curing all the problems unfortunately. I have Signum and I’m interested to know what strength you mix it at for spraying? Thanks in advance.
My boxwoods are pretty full, but they don't have leaves until about one 1foot (a little bit more than 1/3 of a meter) off the ground. How do you prune boxwoods to grow all the way down to the ground?
Interesting - are they pretty old? I am about to reduce the height of some of my box hedges but cutting them back from about 2 foot to one foot. They will be bald on the top but will recover in a year or so. You could try cutting yours right down to 6 inches from the ground, I think they would bush out but may take a year or two. If you are anxious, you could just do one side this year, and then the other side when the first side had recovered. Or just plant little new rooted cuttings around the base to hide their bare bottoms. They are easy plants to get rooted cuttings from, takes a few months though. Good luck 🐇
Hello I'm Silvia from Italy, we pruned our box at the end of march. It was a very dry period than we gave foliare feed and top booxus . I think we overfed the plants. Now the foliage is yellow and dry . I think we have burnt it. On top of it I think that box blight is spreading. I'll try to follow your advices. Thank you so much. I'm so worried
Where in Italy? Could it have been hit by frost? Alternatively sometimes after cutting it if it is hot it does go yellow in the uk but then recovers. It sounds more like environmental factors such as bright sun or frost than a disease. It does seem early to cut it, although maybe in Italy March is normal?🐇
Thank you very much for explaining this so clearly. It is very helpful, and I can see that I must make some amendments to my treatment of the small box hedging I have been establishing this year in order to try to avoid any problems. I had no idea about the danger of watering from above, for example. Thanks, again.
Thank you so much for such helpful informative information. I have found many USA gardeners (professional and like myself not lol) do not know how to care for boxwoods. Blight attacked and the beautiful plants & high investment is lost. Many landscapers say remove them, clean soil, burn soil then replant new plants with new soil. People who have done this have the blight to attach the new plants. Never heard about the pruning the inside (logical) for circulation of air and light. And not water the plant itself just the soil. I can't thank you enough. At this point I feel English gardeners are more familiar, versed and successful with boxwood that those in the USA.
Proven Winner's Company in the US, had created a new type of box that is very blight resistant. Not sure if they sell overseas or not.
Now all we need is one that’s poisonous to box moths:)
Fantastic alternative to Box is Lonicera Nitida. Similar leaf form, totally bomb proof, can be topiarised to whichever shape is desirable & never gets any diseases that I've ever been able to determine. Bonus of the tiny but highly lovely lemon scented flowers in Spring & tiny purple berries in Autumn. Used in Wales a lot.
Apologies for late response. Many thanks for your comments , what I love about gardening is we all hit it from a different view point and one size definitely does not fit all. But I reckon you must have strong arms and patience. ! I know people that cut lonicera nitida hedges 6 times a year to keep them trim, sorry it would drive me bonkers. If you leave it uncut to get flowers and berries it would look worse than me on a bad hair day!
@@bunnyguinness 🤣🤣🤣 Yes, definitely different strokes for different folks. Flowers and berries are a good excuse for those of us who are either a little on the lazy side, (guilty), or for those whose gardening style is a little more relaxed. I really loved your idea of cutting the bottom out of pots but can see why friends and family laugh. Bunny spends a small fortune on terracotta pots, then cuts the bottom out! I've done something similar with drainpipe connectors to raise the soil level in a pot without disturbing bulbs already planted because I wanted to plant a Lobelia on top. Sounds hideous but is soon covered by foliage.
@@bunnyguinness Your very gracious but unexpected reply set my [two] 🧠 cells twitching. Those H20 tanks would make great H20 features if one couldn't be bothered with expensive fiddly hole prone pond liners. Since you have to dig a hole anyway, would just require lateral thinking & McGyver skills. Also could 🐝 used to create a quick terraced effect & or large central feature in courtyards/large driveways (no fiddly brickwork etc). For a central feature use 1 tank as central starting point. For each successive tank dig down, line hole with geotextile & 25-30ml gravel (avoids sump formation), leaving ~5-7" between the top of 1 tank & the next. Can 🐝 symmetrical, offset or whatever is appropriate. Could also be used to avoid expensive time consuming level adjustments in a sloping areas, particularly where access is limited/awkward. Plant with small trees (esp. flowering ones), large shrubs, hardy Cyclamen, Spring bulbs etc. Quite like the idea of Acers & or Magnolias underplanted with dwarf Azalea but the list is endless & like with any type of container planting, soil/compost can🐝 adapted to suit plant choice allowing for a wide range in a small space. A designer such as yourself could come up with some spectacular choices. What's that tree designers like to use that looks like a tiered wedding cake, especially when it flowers; variety of Cornus or Viburnum? Now that combined with Acers could look fab. Careful plant selection could give flowers 12mths of the year. Daphne's & Witch-hazel to brighten a winter's day.
Thank you for this video. I have had box for years and this year I pruned a bit harshly and it probably rained before or after and voilà, I now have box blight. Top Buxus was recommended to me and I have clipped out the bad parts and done a couple of sprays. It's super easy. Things are looking better, but it's not gone yet. Also, I am moving the day lilies which are right beside it and blocking air flow and putting three large pots with standards of some kind there instead. I have put mulch on one side (we can't get the Top Buxus brand here🇨🇦) and will put it down after removing the lilies. I plan to prune inside my newly purchased ones as they are really packed with branches. Thanks for your help and encouragement! 🤞🏼
Good job! Ready to help again this year.
Found your video. Very informative, thank you. I actually have literally been struck with caterpillers. Am not green fingered so have only just learnt what has happened. Just been spraying bug spray over last couple of nights but I think I'm not a good enough gardener to save 6 out of 8 buxus. Will attempt to cut into hedge to get light into them and add the mulch you suggested. Thank you again.
i guess Im asking randomly but does any of you know of a method to get back into an Instagram account..?
I was dumb lost the login password. I would appreciate any tricks you can offer me!
@Decker Immanuel Instablaster ;)
@Sam Dustin Thanks so much for your reply. I found the site on google and I'm trying it out atm.
Looks like it's gonna take quite some time so I will get back to you later with my results.
@Sam Dustin it did the trick and I now got access to my account again. Im so happy!
Thank you so much you really help me out !
@Decker Immanuel Glad I could help =)
Nothing beats box when it grows well
Just a recommendation. Look into ‘Better Boxwood’ which is a new cultivar that is supposed to be blight resistant.
I really like watching your videos because I learn so much. Lots of practical tips! May I please ask how far apart you plant your box plants to keep them at 1-2 ft high? Thank you.
I plant 6 plants per metre run.🐇
@@bunnyguinness Thank you so much for your reply.
This is super helpful - thanks!
Please do more on boxwood. I think I’m killing my bare root plants that I bought off some lad a few months ago. Now I’m worried about my older box hedge.
If you are in the uk and you planted the bare root ones in that really hot dry period we had it might be that you did not water enough initially to get them established?🐇
I have a shared hedge which was OK until my next door neighbour decided to use a leaf-blower to clear the leaves from under the hedge and their pathway. The following few days the leaves suddenly started to turn yellow and fall off!
So I think the problem is the way we cut hedging which leads to dense foilage around the perimeter and the buildup of fungus spores inside -- the same way black spores develop in the corners of a poorly ventilated, damp room. So a possible solution, which you've touched upon, is to improve ventilation inside via selective pruning and to give it a weekly airing in severe cases via a leaf blower during October and November especially when it's mild and damp.
I have used XenTari, Top Buxus and Provado to protect my box from box tree moth caterpillar, but it has to be applied several times a year and is an ongoing battle. You must need tons of it!
Hi @Bunny Guinness +Bunny Guinness ... wondering at 0:44 seconds in th video... what type of hedge is that on the background? Sseems like some type o arborvitae or Thuja? I have been looking into having exactly that type of hedge but have no idea of its name
Thanks for the video, it’s really helpful and addresses the dreaded problem of blight in a simple easy to understand approach with options. I also really like watching the design videos you have done, interesting ideas for layouts and structure. I’ve used the Top Buxus but it’s just not curing all the problems unfortunately. I have Signum and I’m interested to know what strength you mix it at for spraying? Thanks in advance.
My boxwoods are pretty full, but they don't have leaves until about one 1foot (a little bit more than 1/3 of a meter) off the ground. How do you prune boxwoods to grow all the way down to the ground?
Interesting - are they pretty old? I am about to reduce the height of some of my box hedges but cutting them back from about 2 foot to one foot. They will be bald on the top but will recover in a year or so. You could try cutting yours right down to 6 inches from the ground, I think they would bush out but may take a year or two. If you are anxious, you could just do one side this year, and then the other side when the first side had recovered. Or just plant little new rooted cuttings around the base to hide their bare bottoms. They are easy plants to get rooted cuttings from, takes a few months though. Good luck 🐇
@@bunnyguinness Thanks for the advice. It seems sound. I would imagine these box hedges are about twenty or more years old.
So glad to know this, thank you!
Hello I'm Silvia from Italy, we pruned our box at the end of march. It was a very dry period than we gave foliare feed and top booxus . I think we overfed the plants. Now the foliage is yellow and dry . I think we have burnt it. On top of it I think that box blight is spreading. I'll try to follow your advices. Thank you so much. I'm so worried
Where in Italy? Could it have been hit by frost? Alternatively sometimes after cutting it if it is hot it does go yellow in the uk but then recovers. It sounds more like environmental factors such as bright sun or frost than a disease. It does seem early to cut it, although maybe in Italy March is normal?🐇
Absolutely brilliant, thank you.
Great information. Thank you.
I came here to see Bunny Guinness beat boxing.
Oh, I thought this was beatboxing video. Not disappointed, nonetheless :-)
Hilarious! Hope was not too heavy going in comparison 🐇
@@bunnyguinness equally as artistic and spirited, thank you Bunny!
I thought It was my fault...so sad mine got this after 23 years....its just a big patch.
⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️