Native Hedges

Bringing Native Hedges and Vines
Native California hedge plants are quite versatile. Minimally pruned, they’ll create a dense, informal hedge, or you can shear them if you prefer a formal look. Additionally, you can train them to grow flat against a wall or fence in narrow spaces.
Here are some tips and techniques on pruning California natives:
https://www.cnps.org/gardening/digging-deeper/pruning-tips-techniques
If you like the idea of a thinner hedge, fruit trees can be trained to lie flat against a wall. This technique is referred to as an espalier:
Another option is to try a mounding succulent such as Torch Aloe (Aloe arborescens) with its brilliant red blooms. It will create not only an attractive privacy screen but also a security barrier:
Vines can be a source of appealing living fences, too, but they’ll need some underpinnings. Secure vines to a wall with wire supports, wire mesh or a trellis:
Plant a fast growing vigorous vine such as Anacapa Pink Morning Glory (Calystegia microstegia ‘Anacapa Pink’) to quickly cover a fence or an arbor:
If you’re interested in attracting a variety of birds to your garden, privacy hedges and vines provide shade, habitat, and food for both local and migrating birds. Here is a guide of the plants to select and the birds they attract:
Theodore Payne Foundation Native Plants for BirdsBelow you will find a list with photos and a diagram of the Hedges and Vines Garden. The Sustainability Garden is always changing and though District staff will be updating the garden diagrams regularly customers may find a plant out of place in the garden compared to the diagram. if you are looking for a particular plant, let us know and we will work to get you the information you need.
Vines and Hedges DiagramVines and Hedges from the Sustainability GardenFor more information on native hedges and vines, watch the below videos: