Hedge Trimming in Warrington
Sharp, tidy hedge cutting. Hedges shaped, reduced or rescued, with every scrap of green waste taken away. Around nine miles from our Leigh base.
Hedge Trimming for Warrington Gardens
North Warrington was planted generously. The new-town landscaping put hedges, screens and shelter belts everywhere, and forty-plus years on, a lot of it is oversized. Conifer screens on the Cinnamon Brow and Callands estates that were meant to give a bit of privacy now block whole gardens’ light, and boundary hedges around the older Orford plots have thickened into walls. We cut them back hard, shape them properly and take every scrap of waste away.
We cover Warrington and the surrounding area: Winwick, Callands, Orford, Longford, Cinnamon Brow and beyond (WA2, WA3, WA5).
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What’s Included
Out towards Winwick and Croft the hedges get bigger and more rural, long field-boundary and roadside runs of hawthorn and mixed native species that need annual management rather than a light tidy. We handle those too, with the right kit for the length of the run.
- Hedge cutting, shaping and regular maintenance trims
- Height and width reductions, including conifer reduction
- Overgrown hedge rescues and removals
- Conifer, leylandii, privet, laurel, beech, box and yew
- Nesting bird checks before every cut
- All green waste removed and disposed of
How It Works
Hedge Trimming in Warrington, FAQs
Yes, a hedge on a path or road boundary is your responsibility on both faces, and an overhanging one narrows the path for everyone. We cut both sides and the top, tidy up completely, and leave the path clear before we go.
Yes. Rural roadside runs around Croft and Winwick need cutting back so they don’t block sightlines or scrape passing traffic, and it’s the landowner’s job to keep them in check. We work safely at the roadside, time the work outside bird-nesting season and cart all the brash away.
Yes, but carefully. It’s an offence under the Wildlife and Countryside Act to damage or destroy an active bird’s nest, and the main nesting season runs from March to August. Hedge cutting isn’t banned in those months, but the hedge has to be checked first. We inspect before every cut, and if we find an active nest we’ll leave that section and come back once the birds have fledged.
Height can usually come down a long way, and topping a tall leylandii to bring it back under control is no bother, but the sides are the limit. Conifers and leylandii won’t regrow from brown wood, so cutting the faces back too hard leaves permanent bare patches. We’ll look at the hedge and tell you straight what a conifer reduction will achieve, and if removal and replanting is honestly the better option, we’ll say so.
Yes. Green waste removal is included in every hedge cutting quote. Clippings, trimmings and any larger branches are cleared, loaded and disposed of properly, and we sweep up before we leave.