The hedge running along the bottom of my plot was already there when I took it on, thick and gnarly and full of gaps where the previous holder had let it go, and it took me a couple of seasons to work out it was mostly hawthorn underneath all that mess. I’ve since planted a proper stretch of it from scratch along one side, and it’s turned into one of those plants I’d recommend to anyone without much hesitation.

It’s a British native, Crataegus monogyna if you want the full name, and it’ll do a job as either a hedge or a small tree depending what you need. Worth deciding which one you’re after before you buy anything, since that one choice shapes most of what comes after it.

Hedge or tree, and which hawthorn you’re buying

As a hedge, common hawthorn will reach up to 3m left to its own devices, though keeping it trimmed brings that down to somewhere between 1.4 and 2.5m without much bother. The looser you keep the trimming, the looser and less formal it looks, and I’ve found leaving longer gaps between cuts genuinely improves the spring blossom too, so there’s a real tradeoff between tidy and floriferous rather than one being simply better than the other.

If you’re after more than a single species hedge for the sake of wildlife, hazel and elder both pair well alongside it. Bear in mind hawthorn drops its leaves in winter though, so if you want green all year round you’re better off with something like yew, cherry laurel, or western red cedar instead.

As a tree it suits a small garden nicely, flowering and fruiting reliably with berries that hang on well into winter. It’s in the rose family, Rosaceae, which I only worked out after noticing my hawthorn picking up the same fungal spots my roses get most summers. A standard tree will usually settle somewhere between 5 and 10m given the years, though if that sounds like more than your garden can take, there’s a dwarf form that stays much smaller and works better as a big border shrub than a proper tree. There’s also a related species, Midland hawthorn, Crataegus laevigata, slightly smaller with fewer thorns and rounder leaves, its haws carry two or three stones rather than the single stone you get in common hawthorn, and it’s not stocked in the quantity common hawthorn is if you’re after a long run of hedging.

A few named varieties worth knowing
Variety Crataegus persimilis ‘Prunifolia’
Notable for Strong autumn colour
Variety C. x lavalleei ‘Carrierei’
Notable for Strong autumn colour
Variety C. laevigata ‘Gireoudii’
Notable for Dwarf form, around 4m
Variety ‘Paul’s Scarlet’
Notable for Pink flowered, seen done well nearby

Buying it, and getting the timing right

Hedging plants are usually sold bare root over winter while dormant, bundles of rooted hardwood cuttings that come by mail order or from a nursery, and they’re a fair bit cheaper than anything container grown. Container grown versions do turn up between March and September if you’re planting outside the dormant window, but you’ll pay more for the privilege. Trees can be bought either way too, bare root or as a container grown specimen, and a specialist tree nursery will usually have a better range than a general garden centre.

Two ways into the ground
Bare root hedging
Container grown tree
October to February only, dormant season
Any time, winter and spring easier to keep watered
Cheapest option, no soil round the roots
Costs more, established root system already in place
Plant within days or heel in temporarily
Stake for 18 months to 3 years if exposed

It copes with more or less any soil, sun or part shade, and shrugs off exposed sites and wet ground better than most things I grow. The one thing it won’t tolerate is ground that’s waterlogged on a regular basis, the roots will rot given enough of that. Before you commit a tree to a spot, check how big it’ll get and give it the room, since a hawthorn squeezed into too small a gap never looks quite right.

Getting it in the ground

For a hedge, space the plants 45 to 60cm apart in a single row, or run a double row if you want something wider and denser, which also makes for better nesting cover for birds and a bit more privacy besides. Small hedging plants don’t need staking, though I’d keep an eye out for rabbits and deer having a go at them while they’re young, a bit of guard or fencing round new plants saves a lot of heartache later.

A specimen tree, especially in an exposed spot, wants staking for somewhere between 18 months and 3 years until the roots have taken hold. Don’t rush taking the stake away just because the tree looks settled, the time frame’s there for a reason.

Mulching, watering and feeding once it’s in

Get a layer of mulch down once you’ve planted, bark, composted bark or leaf mould all work, and it cuts down how much moisture the ground loses round the roots. Leave a gap of about 10cm round the base of the trunk or stem itself though, mulch piled right up against the bark holds damp against it and that’s how rot gets started.

Keep the immediate area weed free, since anything growing too close is competing for the same water and nutrients your hawthorn needs to settle in. Watering matters more than I expected when I first planted mine, particularly through a dry spell, soak the base well rather than a quick splash on the surface, and keep that up through the first three growing seasons rather than assuming one good summer means it’s sorted.

It’s not a hungry plant once established, but a general fertiliser like Growmore, or blood, fish and bone, given in early spring around February gives newly planted hedges and trees a decent boost while they’re finding their feet. Once it’s clearly thriving on its own, I’d stop feeding it, there’s no need to keep going indefinitely.

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Pruning, and the time of year you can’t ignore

Once it’s established, a formal hedge wants cutting twice or more between late spring and summer, with a final tidy in early autumn to see it through winter looking neat. I aim for a flat topped A shape on mine, roughly a metre wide at the base, tapering up from there. If you’d rather have more blossom and more berries for the wildlife, cut it only once a year, or even every other year, it’ll look scruffier but it’ll do more good.

Shaping a new hedge, year by year
1
Straight after planting
If it’s not well branched, cut the leading shoot back by 15 to 30cm. Forces it to bush out lower down rather than just shooting up.
2
Following summer
Trim side branches back by a quarter to a third to thicken things up. Repeat again the next year if it’s still looking thin.
3
August of the third year
Start tapering the sides, narrower at the top than the base, so light reaches all the way down. Leave the top uncut until it’s hit the height you’re after.
4
If it ever gets overgrown
Renovation pruning, done while dormant in January or February. Taking more than half off the top and sides should be staggered over two or three years, not done all in one go.

Hedge laying is the older, more traditional fix for a sparse or leggy hedge, partially cutting the stems near the base then laying and pegging them over horizontally, you see it most in the countryside but it’ll work in a larger garden too.

Trees need next to nothing by comparison, just take off anything broken, crossing or obviously diseased, and have a proper look round after any bad storm in case something’s come loose. Watch for two main shoots fighting for the lead too, twin leaders as the trade calls it, and just pick one to keep and take the other off before they get any bigger. Once a tree’s well established you can take the lower branches off as well, lifts the canopy nicely, lets more light down to anything you’ve got growing underneath, and makes mowing round the base a lot easier into the bargain. Do any of this while it’s dormant in midwinter, and for anything more serious than a tidy up, get an arborist in rather than chancing it yourself.

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Mind the nesting season. Cutting a hedge or tree between March and August risks damaging an active bird’s nest, which is a real offence under the Wildlife and Countryside Act 1981. Leave it well alone through those months if you possibly can.

Growing your own from seed, and why cuttings won’t work

Growing from seed is the cheap route if you need a long run of hedging, and it’s worth doing if you’ve got the patience. Collect the haws while they’re still green in late summer, soak them in warm water for a few days to soften the flesh, then squash them against a sieve to get the seed out. Sow into seed pans of John Innes seed compost, or half multipurpose mixed with grit or perlite, somewhere sheltered like a cold frame or up against an outside wall, you can also drill them straight into open soil if you’d rather. Cold winter temperatures are what break the seed’s dormancy, but germination the first year can be patchy, so I leave mine in place for a second winter too, more usually comes up the second time round. Cuttings are a non starter with this one, I’ve tried and got nowhere, hawthorn just doesn’t strike well that way at all.

Two routes to a new plant
Growing from seed
Grafting a named cultivar
Cheap, good for raising plenty of plants for a long hedge
A genuinely skilled job, scion from the desired variety onto a 2-3 year old rootstock
Seed grown plants won’t match the parent if it’s a named cultivar
Keeps the new plant identical to the parent every time
First year germination can be patchy, often needs a second winter
Chip bud grafting can also be done in summer as an alternative
Best for plain hedging
Unless you fancy the challenge, buy ready grafted

What can go wrong, and why it rarely matters once it’s settled

Once it’s properly established, hawthorn’s about as reliable a plant as you’ll find, mine’s needed almost nothing from me in years. That said, a few things are worth knowing before they catch you out.

What goes wrong, and how worried to be
Problem
What I’ve seen happen
How worried
Fungal leaf spot
Dark blotches with a grey centre, leaves yellowing too. Looks worse than it is.
Low
Honey fungus
Unexplained decline or death in mature plants. Only way to confirm it is checking the roots.
High
Powdery mildew
Shows up more in dry spells. Watering and mulch keep it off.
Medium
Fireblight
Branch tips look scorched. Cut it out promptly, hawthorn shares the family vulnerability with roses and apples.
Medium
Rabbits and deer
Strip bark off young plants, mostly in cold weather or after snow. Can ring the trunk and kill it outright. Guard anything young.
High
Leaf margin mite
Curls and thickens leaf edges. Looks odd, damage is purely cosmetic.
Low
Aphids and caterpillars
Turn up regularly. I’ve never bothered controlling them, birds and other insects keep numbers down on their own.
None

The roots are the real giveaway with honey fungus specifically, and that’s the only one on this list I’d actually take seriously on a mature plant. Powdery mildew and fireblight both want a bit of attention but neither’s the end of the world if you catch them. Aphids, the leaf margin mite and ordinary leaf spot have never once made me reach for anything in years of growing it.

Why so much hedgerow in Britain is this one plant

I didn’t appreciate how much history was wrapped up in this thing until I started reading round it properly. A chap called William Turner was the first to write it down formally, back in 1562, and it crops up again in old Culpeper’s herbal not long after. Culpeper barely bothered describing it, reckoned the whole kingdom already knew the tree by sight, though he did think the distilled flower water was good for drawing out splinters and thorns. It’s had well over two dozen local names across the country too, and another sixty or so just for the berries themselves, a few of which I’ve come across myself talking to other plot holders:

A handful of its older names round the country
Local name
Where it’s used
Hag-thorn
Devon and Somerset
May-bush
Hampshire and Norfolk
Quick-thorn
Lancashire and Yorkshire
Hipperty-haw tree
Shropshire

There’s a fair bit of superstition attached too, plenty of people still won’t bring the blossom indoors on account of its slightly unpleasant smell, though in Ireland the same blossom brought in on May Day was supposed to keep evil out of the house, which I’ve always found a funny contradiction for the exact same plant.

The young leaves get called bread and cheese and can go straight into a salad, the haws make a decent addition to homemade brandy in much the same way sloes go into gin, and there’s a long tradition of using hawthorn for circulation and calming nerves as a tea or tincture, though that’s a different topic to growing the thing. It was also the main plant used to mark out field boundaries during the enclosures of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, which is most of the reason there’s so much of it still running across the British countryside in long straight lines today. Left to its own devices it’s a proper pioneer species too, one of the first things to move into a patch of waste ground or abandoned field, scrambling up alongside bramble and blackthorn before anything else gets a foothold.

What sold me on planting more of it is the wildlife it brings in, more than two hundred species of invertebrate are tied to hawthorn specifically, somewhere around 125 of those being moths alone.

What it actually feeds and shelters
May blossom
Early season nectar feast, on the previous year’s growth.
Bees Hoverflies Spring
Dense thorny branches
Its own dedicated shield bug and leaf beetle live in here, plus shelter for nesting and roosting.
Nesting birds Shield bug and leaf beetle Year round
Buds and berries
Feeds whatever’s been living on the leaves and insects through to the end of the year.
Birds Hedgehogs Shrews and wood mice

For one plant that asks so little once it’s settled in, that’s a genuinely good return.

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