Traditional hedging and screening plants can take years to reach a desirable size, and many need to grow wide to reach their full height.
Clumping bamboo is a fast, reliable screening plant that won't take over your garden like other bamboo varieties. Here's our guide to help you get to know these versatile plants.
See our step-by-step guide How to plant a clumping bamboo hedge for more planting tips.
The words "screening" and "hedging" are often used interchangeably, but they mean slightly different things.
Screening plants will break up a view, block it to some degree and reduce harsh sunlight. They will not provide dense block-out or a high level of privacy. Hedging plants are either naturally dense or pruned to be dense so that they provide near-total block-out of views and great privacy.
Different clumping bamboo varieties that can work as hedges or screening plants – and some offer the best of both worlds.
Many people are alarmed by any mention of bamboo – and not without reason. Running bamboos can be destructive and hard to control, but clumping bamboos are very different.
All bamboos are grasses – just very, very big ones. And just like the grasses in your lawn they either run or they clump.
Running bamboos send out underground stems or runners, which then send up shoots known as culms. These culms can pop up anywhere – even 10 or more metres away from the main plant - and they are strong enough to punch through asphalt and thin concrete and dislodge pavers.
Running bamboos are very hard to eradicate as they can quickly regrow from these underground parts, even when the main plant is removed. Many are listed as weeds.
Clumping bamboo, on the other hand, sends out new culms as side shoots from the parent plant (these may even arise inside the existing clump). This naturally keeps the plant in a dense clump and makes it much less likely to go feral. New plants generally come from divisions taken off the central clump, so clumping bamboos have come to be known as “escape-proof” bamboos.
Clumping bamboos offer some fantastic advantages over traditional hedging or screening plants.
Clumping bamboos appreciate being fed once or twice a year. A high-quality slow-release lawn fertiliser supplemented with occasional organic liquid feed is ideal. Generally the only pruning is to remove older shoots as they droop out or to restrict height. Some varieties are grown as dense hedging and these can also be pruned as needed to keep them to the required width.
The bamboo’s dense clump will physically block other plants from growing within that area. Bamboos are also mildly allelopathic, producing chemicals that prevent the growth of other plants directly around them. This isn’t uncommon in the plant world - even sunflowers do it - and it will only impact the area directly beneath the plants.
As the clumps age they will spread outwards and might get wider than you want. You can use a sharp spade to trim off, lift and transplant, or appropriately dispose of, the advancing sections.
It is important that any waste material, especially roots, is correctly disposed of through your local green-waste collection service. One of the biggest causes of foreign plants escaping into the bush is illegal dumping of green waste, so make sure you do the right thing.
For more planting tips see our step-by-step guide How to plant a clumping bamboo hedge.
For more about screening plants, check out How to create privacy by planting.
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