Wednesday 22 October 2008

PLANTING A WINDBREAK

There are many situations where creating a garden is made very difficult by strong winds. These in themselves can make it hard to establish more sensitive plants but if the winds carry salt from sea water or are particularly cold the challenge is even greater. Planting a windbreak can dramatically reduce the winds suffered by both our plants and ourselves.

The first thing to remember in establishing a windbreak is that it is better to filter the wind rather than create a solid barrier. A wall or a building might at first seem like the best way to protect an area, but solid barriers create eddies and turbulence around them which may be worse for plants and for you. We are all familiar with the strength of winds between city buildings. In a similar way walls which create immediate barriers to wind also produce strong eddies and swirls of wind around them. Plants tend to filter the wind rather than deflect them so that the strength of the wind is reduced rather than simply moved to another place. They are also less expensive and generally more attractive than walls, generally improve with time and may need less maintenance.

In planting a windbreak you will need to start with a good idea of the predominant wind in your neighborhood. For most places there is a direction from which the majority of winds arrive. For instance most of the UK is subject to predominant winds from the south west although damaging cold winds can also come from other directions. For a garden located on a cliff or headland there may be frequent strong winds from more than one direction. Whichever you suffer from you will need to know about them in advance so that the trees you plant will be in the right place. It may take years to establish the windbreak so it is definitely worth getting this right the first time.

The general principle when planting a windbreak is to establish a row of large trees with dense smaller trees and shrubs either side of it on the windward and leeward sides. These smaller trees and shrubs greatly add to the overall filtering effect. As a general rule the effectiveness of an established windbreak usually stretches on the leeward side of the break for a distance which is around 5-10 times the height of the trees, but there may be some effect up to around 25 times the height. So if your trees are 30ft high the windbreak may be effective for more than 2-300 ft.

To choose plants which will do the job in your difficult situation the first thing to do is to look at the trees and shrubs which are already thriving in your neighbourhood. You may find that there is Sycamore and this is one of the few situations in which the planting of these tough trees can be easily justified in the UK. Generally they are considered a "weed tree" as they are very invasive and support little wildlife compared with native species.They are however a traditional windbreak for hill farms and exposed settlements and can provide the same function for a garden. They will of course lose their leaves in the winter and so a large evergreen tree species should be added to the windbreak. Austrian Pines, Pinus nigra, are excellent in this situation as they are resistant to strong winds and salt and do not need good soils. For an understorey of smaller trees and shrubs you would again be well advised to find out what thrives already in your neighbourhood. Near to the sea likely evergreen candidates will be Griselinia, Arbutus, Holly, Hebes, Eucalyptus gunnii, Olearia, Berberis darwinii, Phormium and Cordyline. Many of these will not thrive in cold and exposed sites. Evergreen shrubs for colder areas might be Eleagnus, Euonymus,Mahonia, Myrica, Rhododendron, and Viburnum. Deciduous trees for both situations may include Rowans and Whitebeams, Birches , Ashes , Beeches, Alders, and Willows. Shrubs could include Fuchsia riccartonii, Rosa rugosa and Gorse.

Of course planting and establishing trees in exposed conditions is also a problem. Our natural instinct is to stake them high and tie them three or four feet above ground level. However there is a problem with this. We should think of the trunks of trees in some respects as being like the muscles of an animal's body. The more they flex and are challenged the stronger they become. Therefore if we stake a tree high and then, after several years, untie it from the stake we will often find that it has not built up sufficient strength to stand alone. Our aim should be to stake it low so that it can still flex but the rootball can't move and loosen the roots. It is sufficient here to say that the tree should either have a low stake at an angle to the tree trunk, have two low stakes joined by a crossbar or should be secured by ground anchoring. Whichever system is used the stake should not go through the rootball, the above ground ties should be loosened a little each year and the tree roots should not be allowed to dry out for a year or two at least. Ground anchoring is a specialized way of securing a tree by tieing its rootball in a non-damaging way below ground. If done correctly the rootball won't move and nothing except the tree is visible above ground. It is an ideal way of planting a tree but requires rather more skill and expense than the conventional ways using stakes.

A good windbreak will take some years to establish but within it a surprising range of delicate and sensitive plants can often survive and, in addition, we humans usually feel a good deal more comfortable as well.

1 comment:

Unknown said...

How wide should a shelter belt be? There has to be an optimum width? (Left to right as you look toward the wind break, not the depth from front to back)