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Landscaping & Gardening

Top tips on all things garden design, including fencing, lawn care, planting and outdoor improvements.

Landscaping & Gardening

Bamboo: The Pros and Cons

Bamboo can be a great feature in your garden and can offer wonderful, natural screening as well as being a great carbon absorber. We go over the pros and cons.

Bamboo can be a great feature in your garden and can offer wonderful, natural screening as well as being a great carbon absorber. However, because of its vigorous nature, if you are not careful, bamboo can easily take over your garden. In this series we will go over the pros and cons of bamboo and how you can get rid of it – or at least control it – in your garden.

What’s so special about bamboo?

There are plenty of advantages of growing bamboo, not least its versatility. With over 1,000 varieties of bamboo, there is a bamboo for every location and climate, with some tolerating temperatures as low as -29°C and others thriving in tropical climates. Bamboo is also brilliant for the environment – not just the bamboo products that you can buy now, but growing it yourself, as it absorbs large amounts of greenhouse gases and emits oxygen. What’s more, the plant’s extensive root system helps to prevent soil erosion. Bamboo is also pest resistant to most potential munchers except bamboo mites, which aren’t a problem in the UK, and very easy to grow; even the least green-fingered gardener can manage a bit of bamboo!

So, if you want a quick and easy natural screen that needs little maintenance and does its bit for the environment, bamboo may be the way forward! Make sure you choose a variety that isn’t too rampant or it could take over your garden; clumping bamboo is a good choice as it reaches about 2m in height and doesn’t spread more than 2-3 cm a year.

So, is there a downside?

Anybody who has tried to limit a bamboo’s domination of the garden will tell you that there is definitely a downside to bamboo! While bamboo is undoubtedly a great way of creating a natural border or privacy screen within a limited period of time, it can be difficult to control. In fact, bamboo is one of the most invasive plants in the world; in the right conditions, the plant’s rhizomes can grow a metre in 24 hours. Thankfully, the Great British climate isn’t conducive to this massive rate of growth, but your bamboo can grow a couple of metres in the space of a year, with shoots popping up all over the place. However, you will still need to control the shoots that arbitrarily sprout in your garden, under your decking or patio, or in your neighbour’s garden, and that is a job which is much easier said than done, even by a professional gardener.

There is certainly a time and a place for bamboo but before you commit, take some time to consider the consequences as you can guarantee you will have bamboo for many years to come.

If you do have an unruly bamboo that you are constantly battling with, follow us on Facebook or Twitter for next week’s instalment when we discuss what you can do to control your bamboo.

Looking for more landscaping & gardening advice?

Find clear, practical answers to common landscaping & gardening questions, helping homeowners understand everyday issues, know what checks they can carry out safely, and when it is best to contact a qualified professional.

  • Do I need a professional to design and landscape my garden?

    For simple stuff - planting, basic lawn care, a few raised beds - you can often manage it yourself. For anything involving hard landscaping, drainage, retaining walls, or changing ground levels, get a professional involved.

    Badly built retaining walls and poor drainage cause expensive problems. A landscaper will also know which materials will actually work for your soil and conditions.

  • What is the difference between a landscaper and a gardener?

    A gardener looks after your garden on an ongoing basis - mowing, pruning, planting, general upkeep. A landscaper creates the garden in the first place - patios, paths, fencing, decking, drainage, planting schemes, the whole structure. Some people do both, but they're distinct skill sets.

    If you want the garden transformed rather than maintained, a landscaper is who you need.

  • How do I get rid of an overgrown garden?

    It's often more work than it looks. Beyond cutting things back, there may be significant root systems to clear, possibly invasive species to deal with (Japanese knotweed needs specialist handling), and ground prep before any replanting can happen.

    For anything seriously overgrown, professional clearance is going to be faster, more thorough, and safer than tackling it yourself.

  • What time of year is best for garden landscaping work?

    Hard landscaping - patios, paths, decking, fencing - can happen most of the year, though very wet or frozen ground causes delays. Planting is best in spring or autumn when things establish more easily.

    If you're planning something big, book a landscaper in late winter for spring work - good ones fill up fast once the season gets going.

  • What should I do if I have Japanese knotweed in my garden?

    Take it seriously. It can damage buildings and hard surfaces, and some mortgage lenders won't lend on properties where it's present and unmanaged. You're not legally required to remove it as long as it stays within your boundary, but you are responsible for stopping it from spreading to neighbouring land.

    It needs specialist treatment - either chemical treatment over multiple growing seasons, or excavation and licensed disposal. Don't compost it or put it in your general garden waste.

  • What are the benefits of artificial grass?

    The obvious one: no mowing. It stays looking decent all year and doesn't turn to mud in winter, which is a real plus for households with kids or dogs. Modern artificial grass is much more realistic than it used to be and holds its colour well. Worth knowing though: it gets noticeably hot in direct sun, needs occasional brushing, and is made from plastic that can't currently be recycled at end of life.

    It's a great fit for a low-maintenance, practical space - less so if the environmental benefits of a real lawn matter to you.

  • How can I make my garden low-maintenance?

    Cut down the amount of lawn first - it needs more regular attention than almost anything else. Swapping sections for hard landscaping or planted beds with ground-cover plants makes a real difference.

    Pick plants that suit your soil and aspect - ones that are happy where they are will largely look after themselves once established.

    A thick bark mulch layer keeps weeds down and holds moisture. A drip irrigation system on a timer removes another regular task. A good landscaper can design a scheme specifically around low maintenance rather than just what looks attractive.

  • Do I need planning permission for decking, a pergola, or a garden room?

    Decking is usually fine under Permitted Development as long as it's no more than 30cm above ground and doesn't cover more than half the garden. Open pergolas are generally okay - but start enclosing them with a roof and sides and they get treated differently.

    Garden rooms are classed as outbuildings: permitted if single-storey, within size limits, not used as living accommodation, and set back properly from boundaries. Listed buildings are a different matter - any structure nearby needs listed building consent. If you're not sure, a quick inquiry to your local planning authority will give you a clear answer before you spend anything.

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