The explosion of box blight and box moth caterpillar has left many gardeners looking for alternative plants for balls, topiary and hedges. Matthew Pottage, curator at RHS Garden Wisley, recommends his top choices. Images by Jason Ingram.

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Published: Tuesday, 16 April 2024 at 09:42 AM


Box blight began ravaging the box hedges at RHS Garden Wisley from around 2006, and we began to tackle it through careful pruning, with some spraying. It felt arduous, and the results were not always satisfactory. It felt wrong and too shocking to strip the garden of its small hedges, so we limped on.

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Then, the box tree moth arrived in noticeable numbers in the garden from around 2014, and the speed of defoliation from the feeding caterpillars was astounding. At the RHS, we were inundated with members asking what they could do to save their box. We found ourselves at a crossroads.

Podocarpus nivalis ‘Chocolate Box’

It was evident there was no panacea that we could rush out and buy, and it seemed we needed more sensible alternatives to spraying or picking off caterpillars. The much-discussed Ilex crenata seemed to be the solution to everyone’s gardening prayers. But in the Wisley climate (hot and dry in the summer, on sandy soil) it appeared to die slowly, going uncontrollably
yellow across its foliage.

I felt we needed to start looking at the ‘clippability’ of other small-leaved evergreen shrubs and conifers. Box had always taken close clipping, seemingly completely tolerant to it. What else could manage such treatment? The Wisley team came up with a wonderful design to carry out an informal trial in the Walled Garden East, where small hedges, pyramids and taller hedges could be made up of different genera and cultivars, with the understanding that as time progressed, we would start to see results that we could share with members and visitors.

PLANT PROFILE

What Evergreen shrubs and conifers with mostly small leaves and a compact habit (when clipped) with potential to form hedges and topiary shapes, without crippling pest and disease associations.

Origins Many of the shrubs featured, which were trialled at Wisley are native to New Zealand, and have typically small leaves.

Season Year-round interest, though colourful juvenile foliage during the growing season adds extra appeal to some cultivars, while others take on a new foliage colour during colder months.

Conditions Generally full sun in well-drained soil, although podocarpus and rhododendron will tolerate partial shade.

Hardiness Mostly hardy in the UK, but pittosporum will suffer below -10°C.

The two main considerations that have become very important are the plants’ ability to cope with close clipping and their levels of vigour. Those wanting a crisp finish, for example, will find a plant needing three clips a year tiresome.

Some early inclusions have been edited out: the wonderful Ugni molinae ‘Butterball’ was too tender for the cold frost pocket that is Wisley, and some of the small-leaved ceanothus couldn’t cope with the level of clipping forced upon them. Other shrubs simply had too much stamina, the most unsuited being Elaeagnus x submacrophylla ‘Compacta’, which managed to throw out extension shoots some 30-60cm high just a fortnight after clipping.

Podocarpus totara 'Aureus'
Podocarpus totara ‘Aureus’

Of course, a range of alternatives brings about different colours, textures and forms. A fascinating debate then ensues – is it really a box alternative if it doesn’t look the same as box? But in a gloomy, north-facing garden, surely trading dull, green box for something with a white, variegated leaf is positive? I’ve seen spheres of the white-speckled Pittosporum tenuifolium ‘Irene Paterson’ used to great effect in a small London garden with an emphasis on blues and silvers. Perhaps the long-held snobbery around plants with coloured and variegated leaves will start to subside if their qualities for other garden uses come into play.

If you are wondering whether Wisley is now bare of box, we have one survivor, and that is Buxus sempervirens ‘Bowles’s Blue’; its larger, slightly puckered, tough, glaucous leaves appear to be making a last stand against both the blight and the caterpillar. It doesn’t clip to a tight hedge, but it is the only box hedge we now showcase.

Watch a clip of Matthew’s hedging choices at RHS Wisley