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Looking for tall but narrow tree for small garden.

My lovely local council has plonked a set of pedestrian lights outside my house and I need a tree to block out the lights when I open my bedroom curtains. As my front garden is only about 10 foot deep, I need it to be tall and slim. Thought possibly an Italian Cypress but, it has to survive sandy soil and a coastal location as well as live alongside my privet hedge. Any suggestions welcome please.
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  • FireFire Posts: 17,116
    Is your bedroom on the first floor?
  • Hi Fire, yes bedrooms on 1st floor only my view affected though. Not sure what the height would be.
  • Great suggestions thank you, I could get away with just one Fastigiata due to the width and I like the possibility of aromatic leaves. My dog - Rocket- wants the Skyrocket haha. Interesting colour and can cope with winds as well, so that's good. Well done for those choices :))

  • Nanny BeachNanny Beach Posts: 8,347
    You said you need to block out the light when you open your bedroom curtains, confused by that. 
  • I can see the pedestrian lights as soon as I open my curtains or generally look out of the window. Mostly a green glow on walls, red glow or flashing amber. Same with downstairs windows but tall hedge stops a lot of that and I am not opening the curtains as wide as before.
  • FairygirlFairygirl Posts: 50,340
    It'll be a while before anything's tall enough to block that, unless you can afford a mature specimen, and have the time to look after it to get it established  :)
    It's a place where beautiful isn't enough of a word....



    I live in west central Scotland - not where that photo is...
  • Fairygirl said:
    It'll be a while before anything's tall enough to block that, unless you can afford a mature specimen, and have the time to look after it to get it established  :)
    I know sadly, but I don't know what else I can do really, well not legslly haha. Think I'll go for the Fastigiata suggested by Cambridgerose12 I couldn't/wouldn't pay for a mature specimen as knowing my luck it would die but, maybe a 5 ft depending on price. It seems pretty tough and doesn't mind sandy soil.
  • LoxleyLoxley Posts: 5,063
    I'm struggling too - I was going to suggest blackout curtains. Are you opening your curtains at night, in which case, why are you doing that? Are the lights so bright that they overwhelm daylight?
  • The first thing I see each morning when I open my curtains is the pedestrian lights. Red, green or flashing amber, and again when I close them at night. They are directly outside my window. In fact they reflect into practically every room in my home. But, I think a tree and a higher hedge should solve a lot of it. They were not there when I bought the house some years ago either so it's a new problem.

    Loxley said:
    I'm struggling too - I was going to suggest blackout curtains. Are you opening your curtains at night, in which case, why are you doing that? Are the lights so bright that they overwhelm daylight?

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