Hedge Trimming
A Well-Trimmed Hedge Does a Lot More Than Look Tidy
Hedges are among the most hardworking elements in any garden. They provide privacy, define spaces, buffer noise and wind, create structure and enclosure, and form the green architecture that gives a garden its bones. When they’re well maintained, they look purposeful and refined. When they’re not, they quickly become the most visible problem in the garden, and one of the most difficult to catch up with once things have got out of hand.
What most people underestimate is how much the quality of the trimming matters, not just whether it gets done. A hedge cut with the wrong technique, at the wrong time, or taken back harder than the plant can sustain, can take years to recover. Brown patches, uneven regrowth, hollow centres, and structural weakness are nearly always the legacy of poor trimming practice rather than problems inherent to the plant.
The timing matters too. Different hedge species have different trimming windows tied to their growth cycles and flowering habits. Trimming at the wrong point in the season can sacrifice a season’s worth of flowers, stress the plant during a vulnerable period, or remove the new growth that would have thickened the hedge over the coming months.
Getting it right requires knowing the plants. That’s what professional hedge trimming is for.
Hedge Trimming That Considers the Plant, Not Just the Shape
At Flourish & Bloom Gardening, hedge trimming is skilled horticultural work. We know the plants we’re working with, we understand their growth habits, and we make considered decisions about timing, technique, and how hard to cut before we pick up the equipment.
Our goal with every hedge is the same: to produce a clean, defined shape that serves the purpose the hedge is there for, while keeping the plant healthy, dense, and vigorous. A hedge that looks sharp immediately after trimming but thins out over time, or that develops die-back and bare patches, is not a well-maintained hedge. A hedge that gets better with each cut is.
If you have hedges that have been cut inconsistently, pushed too hard, or allowed to get substantially out of shape, we can assess them honestly and advise on the best path to restoring them to good condition. Some situations are straightforward; others require a staged approach over a season or two. We’ll tell you which you’re dealing with.
Our Hedge Trimming Services
Formal Hedge Trimming and Shaping
Clean lines and consistent form for structured garden hedges.
Formal hedges, those grown for clean geometric lines rather than a natural or loose form, require the most precise and consistent trimming of any hedge type. The goal is a surface that is even, without undulation or visible high and low points, with crisp defined edges at the top and sides. This takes technique, good equipment, and the patience to work carefully rather than quickly.
We trim formal hedges using appropriate powered and hand tools depending on the hedge type, scale, and finish required. For large straight runs of established hedging, professional hedge trimmers produce an efficient and even result. For corners, curves, shaped tops, and finishing work, hand shears and selective pruning produce the level of precision that powered equipment alone cannot.
We work with all common formal hedging species used in Hobart gardens, including:
- Buxus (box), both common box (Buxus sempervirens) and Japanese box (Buxus microphylla)
- Photinia ‘Red Robin’ and related cultivars
- Murraya (orange jessamine)
- Viburnum, including Viburnum tinus and Viburnum odoratissimum
- Pittosporum species and cultivars
- Lilly pilly (Syzygium species)
- Lonicera nitida (poor man’s box)
- Escallonia
- Griselinia littoralis
For each species, we know the appropriate trimming frequency, how hard the plant will tolerate being cut, and what time of year produces the best result.
Native and Informal Hedge Trimming
Shaping and maintaining hedges that are meant to look natural, not geometric.
Not every hedge needs a ruler-straight profile. Informal hedges, particularly those using native or near-native species, often look their best when shaped and tidied rather than cut to a hard geometric form. The goal is a maintained, purposeful appearance that retains some naturalism while still reading as a defined garden element rather than unmanaged growth.
Native species commonly used as informal hedges in Hobart gardens include:
- Westringia (coastal rosemary) and its many compact cultivars
- Melaleuca species, particularly the smaller-growing forms
- Callistemon (bottlebrush), used as a loose screening hedge
- Olearia species (daisy bush)
- Banksia and Grevillea where used as screening or windbreak plantings
- Kunzea ambigua and related species
Informal hedges often coincide with flowering periods that need to be respected. We time trimming for these species carefully, generally immediately after flowering, to preserve the flowering display and avoid cutting off the growth that will carry next season’s blooms.
Screening Plant Maintenance
Managing fast-growing screening plants before they become a structural problem.
Screening plants, often chosen for their speed of establishment, are among the most maintenance-intensive hedging situations. Species like Pittosporum, Photinia, Viburnum odoratissimum, and Lilly pilly can grow half a metre or more in a single season, and without regular management they quickly exceed their intended size, shade out areas they were never meant to shade, and develop the kind of top-heavy structure that is difficult to reverse without hard renovation.
The most effective approach to fast-growing screening plants is regular trimming on a schedule that manages the growth increment rather than allowing it to accumulate, because catching up from a significantly overgrown screen is always more work, and more risk to the plant, than staying ahead of it.
We offer scheduled trimming programmes for screening plants specifically, with visit frequency calibrated to the growth rate of the species and the desired maintained height and width.
Topiary and Shaped Specimens
Precision trimming for formally shaped individual plants.
Topiary and formally trained specimens, whether simple balls and cones or more complex architectural forms, require careful, precise trimming to maintain their shape. A specimen that has been worked into a defined form over several years is a genuine garden asset; an irregular or asymmetrical cut makes that immediately visible in a way that flat hedge trimming does not.
We trim topiary and shaped specimens by hand, using hand shears and occasionally secateurs for internal or detailed work. The approach is methodical: assessing the form from multiple angles before cutting, working gradually rather than committing too much in a single pass, and finishing with close inspection from a distance.
If you have topiary or shaped specimens that have lost their form through inconsistent trimming or a period of neglect, we can advise on what’s required to restore them and over what timeframe.
Hedge Renovation
Restoring overgrown or misshapen hedges to good form.
Hedges that have been allowed to grow beyond their intended size, or that have been cut inconsistently and developed an uneven or bulging profile, can often be renovated back to a good shape, but it requires judgment about what is achievable and over what timeframe.
Some hedges can be reduced significantly in a single cut, particularly certain resilient species that break back reliably from old wood. Others need to be brought back gradually over two or three seasons, reducing one face at a time to avoid taking too much from the plant at once. A few situations are more complex, and honest advice about realistic outcomes is part of what we offer.
Before committing to a hedge renovation, we’ll assess the species, the current structure, the available growing season, and what the hedge’s purpose requires, and give you a clear picture of what to expect before any cutting begins.
Hedge Trimming for New Plantings
Training young hedges toward their intended form from the start.
The way a young hedge is managed in its first few years has a significant effect on the density, structure, and form it develops over time. Counter-intuitively, cutting back young hedge plants more assertively in the early years encourages branching and density at the base, which produces a better-filled, more solid hedge over the long term than plants that are simply allowed to grow upward without intervention.
We manage new hedge plantings with that long-term outcome in mind, making formative cuts that develop structure rather than simply maintaining whatever the plant produces naturally. A hedge that is trained well from establishment requires less remedial work and looks better at every subsequent stage of its life.
Timing: When Different Hedges Should Be Trimmed
Timing is one of the most important and most often misunderstood aspects of hedge trimming. Here is a general guide for the most common situations in Hobart gardens.
Box (Buxus). Box responds well to trimming through the growing season from spring through to autumn. In Hobart, two to three trims per year is typical for a formal maintained hedge. Avoid trimming in very cold weather or immediately before a frost period, as fresh cuts can be damaged by cold.
Photinia. The signature red new growth of Photinia is produced after trimming, so timing cuts to allow that flush to develop and harden before the next cut produces the best ornamental result. Two to three cuts per year through the growing season works well.
Viburnum and Pittosporum. These resilient hedging plants tolerate trimming through most of the growing season. Flowering varieties should be trimmed after flowering to preserve the display.
Murraya. Murraya flowers from late spring through summer and into autumn. Trim after the main flowering flush to maintain the display, and avoid late autumn trimming in cold climates.
Native species. Most native hedging plants are best trimmed immediately after their main flowering period, which varies by species. This preserves the flower display, allows the plant to put energy into new growth before trimmer comes off again, and avoids the stress of cutting during dormancy or extreme heat.
Fast-growing screens. These benefit from multiple trims per year, with the frequency depending on the growth rate of the species and the desired maintained size. Staying ahead of the growth is always less work than catching up.
We manage these schedules as part of ongoing hedge trimming programmes, so the work happens at the right time without you needing to track it.
How We Work
- Assessment For new clients, we assess the hedges on the property before quoting: species, current condition, desired form, and any issues such as dieback, pest activity, or structural problems that need attention.
- Scheduling We establish a trimming schedule appropriate to the hedge species, growth rate, and the standard you want to maintain. For properties with multiple hedge types, different schedules may apply to different areas.
- Trimming We trim to the agreed form using appropriate equipment, finishing each section before moving to the next. All trimmings are collected and removed as part of the service.
- Clean-Up Trimming generates significant debris. We clean up all clippings from garden surfaces, paths, lawns, and beds as part of every visit. The garden should look better after we leave, not just the hedges.
- Observation We keep an eye on hedge health at every visit. Box blight, scale insects, and other problems are far easier to address when caught early. If we notice anything concerning, we flag it.
Frequently Asked Questions
How often do hedges need to be trimmed?
This depends on the species and the standard you want to maintain. Most formal hedges in Hobart benefit from two to three trims per year through the growing season. Fast-growing screening plants may need trimming every six to eight weeks through summer. Slow-growing species like box may need only one or two cuts per year to stay looking sharp. We’ll recommend a frequency appropriate to your specific hedges.
What time of year is best to trim hedges?
This varies by species. Most formal hedging plants are best trimmed through the active growing season, typically spring through to early autumn in Hobart. Flowering species should generally be trimmed after flowering. We manage timing as part of the service so cuts happen at the right point for each plant.
Can overgrown hedges be cut back hard?
Some species respond well to hard renovation cutting, including box, photinia, viburnum, and most pittosporum. Others, particularly conifers and some natives, do not regenerate reliably from old wood and should not be cut back beyond living foliage. We’ll assess the species and advise on what’s achievable before any hard cutting is done.
Do you remove all the clippings after trimming?
Yes. Clipping collection and removal is included as standard with every trimming visit. We clear all debris from garden beds, lawns, paths, and hard surfaces before we leave.
Can you reshape a hedge that has lost its form?
In most cases, yes. Hedges that have bulged, become uneven, or grown well beyond their intended size can often be brought back to a good shape, though in some situations this is best done gradually over more than one season to avoid stressing the plant. We’ll assess the situation and give you an honest view of what’s achievable and over what timeframe.
Do you trim hedges as part of a broader maintenance programme?
Yes. Hedge trimming integrates naturally into a regular garden maintenance programme alongside mowing, weeding, and garden bed care. Clients on a maintenance programme have hedge trimming scheduled at appropriate intervals throughout the year, so it happens when it should without needing to be booked separately.
Do you notice and flag pest or disease problems in hedges?
Yes. We keep an eye on hedge health at every visit. Box blight, scale insects, aphid infestations, and similar problems are far easier and less costly to address when caught early. If we notice anything concerning, we raise it at the time and advise on appropriate action.
Can you help with hedges that were planted too close to fences or buildings?
Yes, and this is a common situation. We can advise on appropriate maintained sizes given the available space, and manage trimming to keep the hedge within those constraints without compromising its health. In some situations, where a hedge has genuinely outgrown its space, we’ll be honest about the long-term limitations and whether replacement with a more appropriate species is worth considering.
Get a Quote for Hedge Trimming in Hobart
Whether you have a single formal box hedge or a property full of screening plants and shaped specimens, we’d be glad to take a look. Get in touch to arrange an assessment and we’ll provide a clear, honest proposal.
Testimonials
See What Clients Are Saying
Kathleen Moore
30/09/2025
The team from Flourish and Bloom are wonderful. They have been coming to look after my garden for several months, working on to get it to a point…
Andrew Trimboli
17/06/2025
Ro and his Team are such a pleasure to deal with, and real experts in horticulture and garden maintenance. My garden has gone from strength to strength…
Claire Haslewood
11/05/2025
Really pleased with Flourish and Bloom’s work! A knowledgeable and hardworking team. Easy to communicate with.
EXCELLENT Based on 131 reviews Posted on Google Mary CarverTrustindex verifies that the original source of the review is Google. Flourish and Bloom Gardening did an incredible job with an initial home visit to assess what works were required and then providing a free quote. Once accepting the reasonable quote an appointment was arranged that suit to commence and complete the gardening works. The Gardening team did an awesome job trimming all our tall pittosporums (approx 14) to a more manageable level. The gardening team were wonderful and cleaned up the garden debris and removed it all. The team all had excellent customer service and were extremely efficient and helpful. Would highly recommend and will use again in the future.Posted on Google Annette ScanlanTrustindex verifies that the original source of the review is Google. I have had Flourish and Bloom help me in the garden for many months now and they have been excellent. I especially enjoy having the delightful Syd work in my garden. She knows what I like and she has shown her many skills in the garden. I think she also enjoys seeing my garden improve with her help.Posted on Google Cecile H.Trustindex verifies that the original source of the review is Google. Finally - a gardening business that knows their business! Flourish and Bloom really know how to garden, pulling weeds, pruning shrubs, trimming and clipping hedges. I am writing this review after they have been here 4 or 5 times, giving my garden a thorough overhaul and mulching all the beds as well. I am extremely happy with the results - the garden is looking like it can breathe again. Next growth season will be totally Spectacular! Flourish and Bloom will be looking after all my garden maintenance from here on in.Posted on Google Jennifer PepperellTrustindex verifies that the original source of the review is Google. We are so pleased with how Flourish and Bloom look after our garden. They really listen to what we want and also make good suggestions. Their expertise is exstensive. They also accept my sometimes eccentric gardening ideas. Thank you to all the Flourish and Bloom team.Posted on Google Leoni DugganTrustindex verifies that the original source of the review is Google. After many years of bad health with my husband and a hip replacement for me and being at 'that' age!!! I knew I was going to have to reach out for some kind of help, it was becoming a very real reality that we couldn't do what we used to and we needed help. I was advised by my G.P. that it was time to approach the Aged Care help Team. One of my biggest concerns was my lovely garden and I just wasn't able to manage this any more. So aged care introduced me to Flourish & Bloom managed by a young man called Ro. What a wonder Human Being this young chap is, made me feel really relaxed about the help he could provide. His team of young workers has been amazing for me especially, this young team of workers are hard-working, kind and obliging and very knowledgeable. It has been such a great and positive experience for both me and my husband. Nothing is too much trouble I am so grateful for these amazing young people and feel confident telling anyone looking for hard working and knowledgeable gardeners to definitely give Flourish and Bloom a go. You will never regret that Decision Thankyou Flourish & Bloom Leoni & MaxPosted on Google Niamh MoylanTrustindex verifies that the original source of the review is Google. I’m so happy I chose Flourish and Bloom. Ro is experienced, genuine, and really took the time to listen to what I wanted, showing genuine care and pride in the work. The team treated our veggie garden like it was their own. I’d happily recommend them ⭐️Posted on Google Emma EatonTrustindex verifies that the original source of the review is Google. I had a great experience with Flourish and Bloom! I needed some work done quickly and they went out of their way to make sure the job got done. Professional, helpful and skilful.Posted on Google Anne PritchardTrustindex verifies that the original source of the review is Google. Ro and his team were amazing. Very professional from start to finish. Syd did a great job on all our hedges and a very thorough job of cleaning up afterwards. Nothing for us do. Will use them again and highly recommend their services.Posted on Google Marc DuldigTrustindex verifies that the original source of the review is Google. Over the past 3 years we have had new lawn laid with an in ground watering system installed, a new garden bed created, plus an old garden bed fully replanted. In addition there has been continuing garden maintenance. All the work has been completed by very friendly staff to a level of expertise that is exemplary and worth the cost. In all stages of our garden's development there has been careful consultation and planning. We still have further plans over the next 12 months but we are delighted with what we have to date. I cannot recommend Flourishing and Bloom highly enough.Posted on Google Kathleen MooreTrustindex verifies that the original source of the review is Google. The team from Flourish and Bloom are wonderful. They have been coming to look after my garden for several months, working on to get it to a point where it only now needs weeding. I dont have any lawn so its all been weeding, mulching, moving pots, even putting together, and installing an arch. I find them very friendly, helpful and so professional. Nothing is too much trouble and they always clean up after they have finished. Their advice has been invaluable.Verified by TrustindexTrustindex verified badge is the Universal Symbol of Trust. 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