Hedgelayers keep ancient country craft alive in Loxwood

A band of hedgelayers - members of the Wey & Arun Canal Trust - are helping to keep an ancient craft alive.
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And they are also providing a valuable habitat for wildlife in Loxwood.

The trust’s hedgelaying team - which has been running for 18 years - began their weekly working party under covid-safe conditions at the end of November.

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The team usually works from October/November until February/March when birds begin nesting.

Cutting stakes and bindersCutting stakes and binders
Cutting stakes and binders

This season they are laying a hedge along the canal at Loxwood, continuing one they began last year.

Each team member has an individual area to complete, marked out in orange paint, keeping them socially distant from one another.

The Loxwood hedge will be laid in ‘Southern Counties’ style. According to the National Hedgelaying Society there are more than 30 different regional styles, developed to cope with the climate of an area, different farming practices and the trees and shrubs that grow there, which in West Sussex is usually native species of hawthorn, field maple, ash and oak.

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The technique, unchanged for centuries, first involves removing brambles and excess growth from the hedgerow about to be laid.

The hedgelayer then cuts away - pleaches - the stem towards ground level and arches it over at an angle of 60 degrees, encouraging new shoots to grow straight upwards.

The ‘pleachers’ are then weaved in and out of the hazel stakes, with a stake every 21 inches.

The aim is to create a line for the eye to follow, with stakes in a row and the rolling lines of binders in between.

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Even the tops of the stakes are cut with care, so they are all the same height and angle.

A trust spokesman said: “The result is a thing of beauty bordering the canal towpath, but importantly the practise keeps a hedge healthy and longer living, and provides both food and refuge for wildlife.”

The Wey & Arun Canal Trust hedgelaying team will be working on the Loxwood hedge, opposite the Canal Centre, for the rest of the season.

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