
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from Philippines
seen from China
seen from Taiwan
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from Malaysia

seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from United Kingdom
seen from Russia
seen from United States

seen from Russia

seen from Malaysia

seen from United States
seen from China

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
Free to watch ⢠No registration required ⢠HD streaming
Two restored old Billhooks , all rust removed ,handles repaired ,blades are free from dinks with good working edges.
The less curved Hedgehog brand one has already sold ,only the Parkes Biped is available but only to over 18â˛s ,please contact for specs at the email below.
Custom knives , sheaths and gear from [email protected]
Why Hedgelaying Makes a Better Hedge
Why Hedgelaying Makes a Better Hedge
Hedgelaying now seems hopelessly quaint. Itâs incredible to think that there would have been thousands of agricultural workers spending months and months painstakingly managing hedges with slashers and axes. The time it took is mind boggling. This sweet video from 1942 would have been completely unremarkable â I guess the landgirl would have seemed the most unusual thing about it!
Each area hadâŚ
View On WordPress
Cory the #jagdterrier enjoying the #fire at the end of the day #hedgelaying at #wimpole
Westcountry hedgelayer is out there living the dream. If you ever insta, I recommend following him

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
Free to watch ⢠No registration required ⢠HD streaming
The National Hedgelaying Society (UK)
Hedge Laying, 5th May, 2020
Hedge laying trip
It was the Great Hedge Laying Trip last Thursday. Iâd taken myself and husband Neil, cameraman, up to Richmond overnight. We had no idea where we were as weâd just followed Stephen in our car to somewhere near Bedale in North Yorkshire the next morning. Me and Stephen have known each other since we were born, our mums are childhood friends. We arrived on the edge of a farm where the hedge that theyâd laid already stretched off into the distance and fighter jets were flying around from RAF Leaming, so it was quite noisy. I did have a go at this years ago but I couldnât remember what to do, but was eager to have another go. He had told me this hedgerow was planted about 10 years ago with hedge laying in mind (the farmer he works for is a top man! I hope to meet him one day, he sounds very conscientious and a forward planner regarding conservation, Iâd love to interview him and see what I can learn) so now is the time to actually lay the hedgeâŚand all the trees are mainly Hawthorn, Blackthorn a bit of Gelder Rose, a bit of Dog Rose, Holly and Field Maple.
Stephenâs background is a degree in countryside management and conservation work. He works for conservation charities and is now self-employed doing hedge laying in the winter and working for a nature reserve. This job came about from the landowner in Well who knew he did hedge laying and needed hedge laying all over his land.
âLoads of it.â As Stephen put it âHeâs passionate about his hedgerows.â
âLetâs talk about tools. What have we got?â I asked.
âThereâs two types of billhooks here, thereâs loads available, regional styles. This is a Yorkshire billhook, which is probably the biggest, well it is the biggest one. And thatâs a Stafford Pattern. And theyâre principally the tools. A pair of loppers, it makes it easier. Obviously chain saw for the bigger stuff.â
Heâd bought his billhooks from the Vintage Tool Shop. The idea with a billhook is that you just cut so far through the tree, enough that itâs pliable enough to bend over without snapping, but not too much that you lose the tree.  (What is a billhook?)
Photo of me using a billhook. Notice the cut, in this case, is on the right of the trunk as it will be laid down to my left. Enough of the trunk is left attached so it doesnât snap, which needs really careful attention, otherwise the trunk is completely cut through rendering it unable to be incorporated into the hedge. The tree may not die, depending on the species, but would take years to grow to a suitable height for the hedge.
He went on to explain that billhooks are used for the laying. In years gone by, people would have used axes but nowadays they use a chainsaw to speed things up because people have to make a living out of it. Centuries ago, all the agricultural labourers would have worked together on it. Most hedges were planted, and dry stone walls, in the 1600âs mainly, because that was the main âInclosure Actâ of 1773 was passed in this country, where all the land was divided up and farming methods changed. It is still in act today. âDo they have original hedgerows still growing around? Have you ever come across any really ancient ones?â I asked.
And I was really pleased as he said âYes, Iâve laid one up in Well which was, well they donât know exactly how old it is but itâs generations and generations, so itâs hundreds of years old.â And that âitâs been laid before obviously, and by laying a hedge, youâre promoting the length of its life because of the regrowth.â
Interested to know about what management has to be done once a hedge has been laid, as I assumed it would be just like trimming off the tops and the sides he said
âYou can let it grow back up and re-lay it, or if, because itâs quite expensive to lay them, you generally let them grow up, keep trimming them and they just get denser and denser until eventually there will come a point where you will need to let it grow up and re-lay it again. The whole point of laying it is that if you donât lay them, this is a newly planted hedge about 10, 12 years ago, if you donât lay them and just keep trimming them, they just get gappy at the bottom. And the whole idea is that itâs stockproof. And if itâs all gappy at the bottom livestock can get underneath it.â
So what livestock, sheep, or just any?
âSheep, cows. Youâve got various regional styles of hedge laying depending on what stock you have. This is laid in a Yorkshire style, but itâs actually staked in a Lancashire style (laughing) the purists wouldnât like it, but originally the Yorkshire style would have had stakes down the middle with a top rail fastened on because itâs laid so low, itâs laid much lower than other hedges. Most people think of the Midland Bullock Hedge which is more at 45 degree angle and itâs got the woven hazel on the top as binders, whereas the Yorkshire one just had a rail on. Each region developed different styles depending on what they had. In Yorkshire it was uplands, so there was coppices, no abundance of hazel and stuff to coppice, to weave for binding, so they used to put a rail on, just so it was stock proof for the first season.â
He said itâs just nailed on top of the posts and it doesnât look very pretty, but itâs not necessary on his hedges, so thereâs no point doing it. If you were in a competition you would have to do it because thatâs the style but his hedge doesnât need it because itâs fenced in and next to an arable field, so it doesnât need to be stock proofed.
Once this hedge has been laid, it will just keep growing forever as long as somebody manages it. Theyâll let it grow up to the height they want and then theyâll keep trimming it and it will just get denser and denser and then eventually, probably in 20 years maybe, maybe longer, theyâll let it grow up a bit more and then theyâll re-lay it again.
The thorns of the blackthorn are lethal, Iâve had them in me a few times. Theyâve got some bacteria that lives on itâs tips, so when you get the blackthorn in you, it hurts, it swells, and some people get infection from it. So gloves! Always wear your gloves!
Then it was time for me watch Stephen demonstrate how to do it and then for me to have a go. For my first attempt, I was chipping away, using far too many cuts to lay one, which amused the onlookers and Stephen said try not to put my billhook in the soil which made us all laugh! Then I got stuck on the fence so Stephen had to free me. For my next attempt I made 1 cut to the next tree which was sufficient enough to lay it, getting my street cred back!
Everyone joined in laying some hedge and Stephen was preparing the trees for laying with the chain saw, to which my husband said âThereâs no stopping him now, heâs off, itâs what he was like driving this morning when we were to keep up!
Bob, who has worked with Stephen for years had joined us at this point. He said âItâs fantastic how it comes again, isnât it?â
Hedges are laid uphill so the sap can rise. If you lay a tree downhill youâve got to bend the trunk more so thereâs more danger of snapping it. Essentially, itâs like coppicing as the regrowth comes from the base of each stem or the tree trunk, (some regions call hedge laying âPleachingâ) and you get regrowth along the stems as well. These are all living because youâve preserved enough sapwood and bark so they will regrow, but eventually the trunk you have laid will die, but by the time theyâve died, youâve got all the regrowth from the base.
 My gloves were too big, and kept falling off. I spent time pushing down the branches to keep the laid hedge low and yes, I got black-thorned straight through my glove, straight into my knuckle, but I laughed it off as it is all part of the process!
All in all, we had a fantastic day which I will always remember, thank you Stephen! Photo - âIâve been black-thorned! It really hurts!â
One of life's little pleasures