| Introduction
Your garden, as well as your
house, has valued possessions that thieves would love to steal.
It also has equipment that could help them break into your house.
Most burglars are lazy.
They look for easy ways of getting into a house or garden. By taking
a few simple precautions you can reduce the risk of being burgled
and make your house and garden more secure.
Natural protection
One of the best ways to keep
thieves out is to use nature's own defence mechanisms to stop intruders.
A barrier of prickly hedge may be all the protection you need around
your property.
Here are some suggestions
for plants to use.
Creeping Juniper
Juniperis horizontalis 'Wiltonii'
- Also known as 'Blue Rug' because it has long branches and its
prostrate shape forms a flattened blue carpet. It has a thorny stem
and foliage.
Blue Spruce
Picea pungens 'Globosa' -
Rigid branches, irregular dense blue, spiky needles. Height 1-1.25m
x 75cm - 1 m. Slow growing. Moist rich soil.
Common Holly
Ilex agulfolium - Large evergreen
shrub, dark green spiked leaves. Large red berries on female plants
only. Any well drained soil. Plant with garden compost and bone-meal.
Giant Rhubarb
(Gunnera manicata)- Giant
rhubarb-like leaves on erect stems, abrasive foliage. Can grow up
to 2.5m high. Plant by water-side for effect.
Golden Bamboo
Phyllostachys aurea- Very
graceful, forming thick clumps of up to 3.5m high. Less invasive
than other bamboos. Hardy. Young shoots in spring.
Chinese Jujube
Zizyphus sativa - Medium
sized tree with very spiny pendulous branches. Leaves glossy bright
green. Bears clusters of small yellow flowers.
Firethorn
Pyracantha 'Orange Glow'
- Flowers white in June, with bright orange-red berries. Thorny
stem. Height 10-15ft. Suitable for north or east-facing wall or
as impenetrable hedging.
Shrub Rose
Rosa 'Frau Dagmar Hastrup'
- Excellent ground cover, pale pink flowers, very thorny stem. May
to September. Plant with garden compost and bone-meal.
Pencil Christmas
Tree
Picea abias 'Cupressina'
- Medium-sized tree of columnar habit, with ascending spiky branches.
Attractive form with dense growth. Avoid dry chalky soils.
Juniper
Juniperus x media 'Old Gold'
- Evergreen. Golden-tipped foliage. Prickly foliage. Height 2ft.
Spread 6 ft. Low growing. Excellent ground cover.
Purple Berberis
Berberis thunbergil 'Atropurpurea'-
Rich purple foliage. Thorny stem. Medium-sized deciduous. Any soil
sunny position.
Mountain Pine
Pinus mugo 'Mughus'- A very
hardy, large shrub or small tree, with long sharp needles, of dense,
bushy habit. Leaves in pairs, 3 - 4cm long, rigid and curved, dark
green, cone.
Blue Pine
Picea pungens 'Hoopsii'-
Small to medium-sized tree, spiky needled stem, densely conical
habit, with vividly glaucous blue leaves. Likes moist, rich soil.
Oleaster
Elaeagnus angustifolia -
Small deciduous tree, about 4.5 to 6 m (15 to 20 feet) high. Smooth,
dark brown branches that often bear spines and narrow, light green
leaves that are silvery on the undersides. The flowers are small,
greenish, fragrant, and silvery-scaled on the outside, as are the
edible, olive-shaped, yellowish fruits, which are sweet but mealy.
Hardy, wind resistant, tolerant of poor, dry sites, and thus useful
in windbreak hedges.
Blackthorn
Prunus spinosa - Also called
Sloe; spiny shrub. Usually grows less than 3.6 metres (12 feet)
tall and has numerous, small leaves. Its dense growth makes it suitable
for hedges. White flowers. Bluish-black fruit is used to flavour
sloe gin.
Fuschia-flowered
Gooseberry
Ribes speciosum - Fruit bush,
spiny, produces greenish to greenish-pink flowers in clusters of
two or three. Extremely hardy, thrive in moist, heavy clay soil
in cool, humid climate.
In addition, the following
thorny plants can also be considered:
Aralia, Chaenomeles, Colletia,
Crataegus (including hawthorn/may), Hippophae (sea buckthorn), Maclura,
Mahonia, Oplopanax, Osmanthus, Poncirus, Rhamnus, Rosa (climbing
& shrub roses), Rubus (bramble), Smilax, Prickly ash (Zanthoxylum)
Although they will take some
time to grow, the end result justifies the effort. They should deter
even the most determined burglar.
Hedges and shrubs in the
front garden should be kept to a height of no more than 3 feet in
order to avoid giving a burglar a screen behind which he/she can
conceal himself.
For further information and
advice please contact the crime prevention officer at your local
police station.
What you can do
- Put away all tools and equipment and ensure that all outside
sheds and store cupboards are securely locked when not in use.
- Bring the tools inside if you do not have a garden shed or outbuilding.
- Use plant protection - such as thorny shrubs.
- Install outside security lighting which comes on automatically.
- If you have a burglar alarm, why not extend it to cover outbuildings
and sheds?
- Photograph valuable garden plants or ornaments.
- Mark your property with your postcode. This makes stolen property
easier to trace and it can be positively identified as yours.
- Check that your household insurance policy covers theft from
your garden and outbuildings.
- If you have a local Neighbourhood Watch Scheme, why not join?
- If you have a burglary, don't move or touch anything, just ring
999.
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