best/cheapest windbreak ideas wanted

Started by OliveOil, June 21, 2006, 10:46:10

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OliveOil

As the title suggests - i have a big plot... so it really does have to be cheap LOL  The wind seems to whip across the site - esp my bit!  Most people down my lotty have corrugated iron as windbreaks - but getting hold of that is pretty hard unless you haev ££££££££££

OliveOil


tim

A solid break is 'wrong'.
Don't know about prices, but I think that Rokolene may be the best.

We've used the same pieces for decades.

It's also our shading!

Palustris

Don't buy from Garden centres! Se if you can find a local company, Agricultural/horticultural type outlet. they are often far cheaper than G/cs.
If not then Mail order companies offer the best bet.
Gardening is the great leveller.

tim


OliveOil


Palustris

LBS Plasticas are cheaper than Kay's
Gardening is the great leveller.

Multiveg

I'd say Jerusalem artichokes for windbreak!!!!  ;D

Advantage is that you can eat the potato-like tubers (supposedly good for diabetics), but beware of adding to the greenhouse effect!
Allotment Blog - http://multiveg.wordpress.com/
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supersprout

ha ha ha ha multiveg
the wind has blown five of my JAs over and I have had to stake them this morning :-X ;D

amphibian

Quote from: Multiveg on June 21, 2006, 12:29:46
I'd say Jerusalem artichokes for windbreak!!!!  ;D

Advantage is that you can eat the potato-like tubers (supposedly good for diabetics), but beware of adding to the greenhouse effect!

Ironic that they break the wind when in the soil, and you break wind when they are in you. I think they absorb the wind all day and let it out later.

tim



OliveOil

yep they are the cheapest and you get a discount off your first order!

tim


John_H

someone on my site puts up roles of that large guage sheep fencing and then covers it with the mesh plastic netting which goes on scaffolding to stop bits of plaster falling into the steet.

Also you can take hundreds of cuttings of rosemary, sage and lavender and plant out your own natural windbreak in a year to take the place of the netting. This option smells and looks a lot more pleasing and also encourages the bees.
Indian build small fire, keep warm.
White man build big fire - keep warm chopping wood!
http://www.20six.co.uk/johnhumphries

amphibian

Quote from: John_H on June 24, 2006, 21:58:42
someone on my site puts up roles of that large guage sheep fencing and then covers it with the mesh plastic netting which goes on scaffolding to stop bits of plaster falling into the steet.

Also you can take hundreds of cuttings of rosemary, sage and lavender and plant out your own natural windbreak in a year to take the place of the netting. This option smells and looks a lot more pleasing and also encourages the bees.

Mesh and a herb hedge would be even better, two diffuse layers works best of all.

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