Barnyard96 said:
I have a 100' back fence that I want to plant a 10-12' high privacy hedge. In Bryan neighborhood with irrigation system.
Suggestions for an evergreen solution?
I planted 22 eagleston hollies and put in an irrigation system with bubblers. They have done well. It was certainly a budgeted, DIY build. I got them straight from a huge regional distributor hub of Moon Valley Nurseries out in Wharton, TX. Worth the trip because the trees were 70% off compared to the retail stores, but I hauled them off and installed them myself.
Things I like about the eagleston hollies:
-They will grow together as a hedge, touching limbs won't air gap each other
-They are extremely hardy for the weather within texas
-They'll be 20 feet tall and 10 feet in diameter one day, perfect for screening out a two story house in the burbs.
-Evergreen
Things I haven't liked about them:
-They don't have as dense of a growth habit as I would've liked. When you get them from the nursery they are super thick and dense because they are constantly being cut back. When they get some space to grow there is a lot of branching out and daylight visible through them. Its going to take a couple years of good pruning to keep them growing densely into a screen.
-They have struggled to overcome some lingering transplant shock. I planted them last May and they have gone through big bouts of losing the inner leaves. Seems like every time there was an extreme weather event, hot, cold, or lots of rain I could count on leaves turning yellow and dropping.
-I didn't plant them close enough but thats just budget constraints. I bought trees that were 9-10 feet tall already and 1.5-2.0" in diameter. I thought it would be all blended in and my neighbors fully disappeared in 5 years. Its looking like it'll be closer to 10 before that happens.
My tips going forward would be: If you can't afford to plant larger (which gets exponentially more expensive), plant closer. If I had to do it over again I would've probably done 5 ft or maybe even 4.5 foot intervals. Look at all the versions of hollies. The berries being a hazard to dogs is really overblown. Don't do oleanders, those will kill your pets and do kill kids because they are so toxic.
The irrigation system has been clutch. Put pex in the ground and each tree has a constant flow bubbler that puts out .25 GPM. All on its own sprinkler valve.