THE ANNUAL task of pleaching 168 lime trees at Erddig is underway.
Earlier this April, head gardener, Glyn Smith alongside staff and a small team of volunteers started the annual task of pleaching the lime trees which involves trimming each branch by hand, estimated to take a total of 65,000 snips along 168 trees ready for them to burst into leaf by mid-May.
The avenues of lime trees were planted at the Wrexham beauty spot in 1976 by then head gardener, Mike Snowden who set about restoring the Grade I listed garden to its 18th-century formal design.
When discussing the huge task, Glyn said: “We’re over halfway through the skilled task of pleaching the lime trees and are aiming to finish next week.
"The trees will then burst into leaf a week or so later. It’s a sight we and many visitors look forward to every year.
"They aren’t your typical lime trees though; they don’t produce zesty limes, but they do get their name from the limey scent they give off when they flower in the summer.
"These are of a moderately vigorous hybrid lime, Tilia x euchlora and make for a stunning sight in the garden."
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Glyn has been the head gardener at Erddig for 37 years hasn’t missed a year of pleaching the trees. He knows every trunk, stem and knot.
“Pleaching the trees is the method we use where we train the trees to produce a narrow screen or hedge by tying in and interlacing flexible young shoots along a supporting framework. Each of the branches have been grafted together to join with their neighbour.”
“It’s important to keep the trunk or stem of the tree clear, so a big part of the task is also cutting away new shoots, so that the height and the formal appearance of the trees remain tidy and encourages dense growth.”
“The linear hedge then provides shelter and shade for many habitats such as birds and invertebrates. In former times, as now, they also give shade to those walking in the garden.”
The trees provide a show stopping display throughout the year, with spring being the most anticipated season as the heart-shaped leaves emerge, green with a yellowish underside.
Early autumn will see the leaves turn a deep yellow before falling to the ground, revealing the grooved bark and deep russet twigs, giving all year-round structural interest to the garden.
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