Showing results for privacy from neighbours
With zero regard to my soil/geographical conditions I planted a passion fruit vine and the damn thing is indestructible. It’ll take over the whole house if I don’t trim it way back every few weeks. Most privacy we’ve ever had! Answer from Deleted User on reddit.com
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Reddit
reddit.com › r/gardening › good plant for privacy from neighbors?
r/gardening on Reddit: Good plant for privacy from neighbors?
March 25, 2024 -

This is the view from my back deck; if the neighbors are on their deck we can easily talk to each other. While I do like my neighbors, I also like my privacy. I don’t have any other concerns about privacy besides this area.

My solution needs to be 6-8’ wide, and extend about 2’ above the top of the fence (6’ fence). I was thinking of putting 2’ tall lattice on the top of the fence then plant a vining plant at the base of the fence and train it up to fill in the lattice… but that might take a while and I want privacy this summer! Arborvitae would be practical here, but neither my husband or I like the look of it.

Ideally I want a plant that’s an evergreen for privacy in summer as well as winter. But I’m stumped. Not sure what to do… any ideas are welcome! The more the merrier! Please help. lol zone 8B Portland, OR metro area

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Real Simple
realsimple.com › home-organizing › gardening › outdoor › plants-for-privacy-from-neighbors
21 Best Plants for Privacy From Neighbors
February 28, 2025 - This fast-growing climbing vine is an ideal plant for creating privacy from neighbors. "Burgundy Queen is a vigorous climber, growing up to 30 feet long. It is the perfect selection for weaving through trellises and fences for privacy or as an accent plant in large patio pots," explains Georgia Clay, plants manager at Monrovia.
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University of Maryland Extension
extension.umd.edu › resource › plants-mixed-privacy-screens
Plants for Mixed Privacy Screens | University of Maryland Extension
Layer larger plants as your backdrop with medium-height plants in front and between them and put ornamental grasses or groundcovers around the perimeter. Three of the same species of evergreen in decline will leave a significant gap in this screen. Photo: University of Maryland Extension · A variety of evergreen and deciduous trees are used in this privacy screen.
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American Meadows
americanmeadows.com › blogs › perennials › best-container-plants-for-creating-privacy
Best Plants For Creating Privacy | American Meadows
January 16, 2018 - Shrubs are terrific choices to create privacy as they are often well branched, have an exciting flowering season (sometimes with scent!), and can bring a sense of traditional hedging to a small space. When grouped with smaller container plants or layered with other shrubs, they provide the backbone needed to make more from less.
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RHS
rhs.org.uk › plants › for-places › screening
Plants for screening | RHS Advice
November 10, 2025 - They can be formal, such as clipped Buxus (box), Taxus (yew) and Fagus (beech) or informal with colourful foliage or flowers, like Viburnum or Crataegus (hawthorn). Conifers are also popular choices, and although Leyland cypress has a reputation ...
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Royal City Nursery
royalcitynursery.com › home › royal city nursery – blog › the best types of plants for privacy from the neighbours
The Best Types of Plants for Privacy From the Neighbours - Royal City Nursery - Blog
April 3, 2023 - These fast-growing vines and trees for privacy screens are your best options for blocking the view of nosy neighbours! Create a wall with trellises and vines or trees.
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JMF Landscaping
jmflandscaping.com › youll-be-shocked-at-our-list-of-privacy-plants-for-house-and-apartment
Thickest, Tallest, and Fastest Growing Privacy Plants for House and Apartment
Lilac is a deciduous shrub that can reach heights of up to 16 feet tall [6]. In addition to being used to attract butterflies and hummingbirds—as well as provide fragrance and good cut flowers—lilacs can also be used as a privacy hedge. Privet is a fast-growing shrub that includes roughly 50 species [7]. They grow upright, they grow quickly, and like boxwood, they tolerate pruning. Variegated privet will require full sun, and all varieties will need well-draining soil in the pots.
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Houzz
houzz.com.au › magazine › block-out-thy-neighbour-privacy-plants-for-the-modern-home-stsetivw-vs~41847280
Best Screening Plants for Privacy from Neighbours | Houzz AU
Bamboo is an excellent privacy solution for the modern home as it grows up to 6m high without the width that comes from most privacy plants, making it perfect for smaller block sizes. While the old running bamboo received a bad reputation for creeping and spreading into neighbouring properties, the new cultivars such as slender weavers (Bambusa textilis ‘Gracilis’) are what’s called ‘clumping’ bamboos.
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Great Garden Plants
greatgardenplants.com › translation missing: en.general.breadcrumb.home › privacy & screening
Plants for Privacy & Screening | Online Plant Nursery – Great Garden Plants
Whether you're looking to transform your landscape into a private oasis, shield your garden from neighbors or conceal unsightly elements, this collection of privacy and screening plants will help you with whatever your goal may be. From elegant ornamental grasses and flowering shrubs to towering trees, this collection of plants will add beauty and interest to your garden, all while adding much-needed privacy.
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RHS
rhs.org.uk › plants › articles › graham-rice › shrubs-and-climbers › plants-for-privacy
RHS Gardening / Plants for privacy / RHS
They also suffer greatly if allowed to dry out completely - which is always a risk with large potted plants if you go away on a sunny summer weekend. And then there’s the fedge, a cross between a fence and a hedge in which ivy, star jasmine or another evergreen climber is trained through a fence to make a stout and solid screen. So if all that separates you from your neighbour is a trellis or chain-link fence, a fedge is the answer.
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Roots Plants
rootsplants.co.uk › blogs › features › privacy-plants
The Best Privacy Plants to Screen Your Neighbours – Roots Plants
November 17, 2023 - If your garden or home is overlooked by just one window of your neighbour’s house, a single, well-placed tree will do the job. If the space to be filled is wide, go for a multi-stem tree, but otherwise choose a single-stemmed tree with a dense, bushy top that can be trimmed into an appropriate shape (not this) such as holly or oak. A row of trees can also be a good alternative to a privacy hedge, allowing you to add screening at the top of a fence while still being able to plant in the border below it.
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Tom's Guide
tomsguide.com › home
7 plants to create more privacy in your backyard | Tom's Guide
March 14, 2023 - From tall shrubs, grasses and climbing plants, these all offer a level of privacy for your outdoor space. Not only do they offer a more enclosed feel (and prevent spying neighbors!), but will add beauty to your backyard.
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Homes and Gardens
homesandgardens.com › gardens › best-plants-for-privacy
Plants for privacy – 10 ways to hide an eyesore or screen your yard from view
May 13, 2023 - From dense evergreens to flowering hedges, these privacy plants will screen your yard from neighbors, block unsightly views, and add interest to your planting scheme
Top answer
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On the assumption your measurements are in mm, not cm (300 cm is 3 metres and no container would be that wide), that would make your pot (in feet and inches) about two and a half feet deep by roughly a foot across, or 80 cm deep by 30 cm wide. The tree you've mentioned will grow in it for a while, but inevitably, over time, its growth will be very much constrained by the lack of root space, so although its impossible to say what height and spread it might reach, its safe to say it definitely won't reach 3m in height. After a while, it may start to look rather sick - most large plants are okay in largeish pots for up to 3, possibly 4 years, but after that, they start to look 'thin' and weak.

Any plant that can be expected to reach 3m won't do so in a pot, I'm afraid. Since your intention is to create something that blocks the view from a window above, have you considered some kind of small pergola, single or double row, with a pot either end of the size (but preferably larger) you mention, with perhaps a climbing plant in each, which, if the pergola is only 6 feet tall and a foot or two across at the top, might mean you could get some of the growth across the top? That would block the upstairs view of the area beneath, even though its not high enough to block their window. Or a shade sail similar to this https://www.primrose.co.uk/sail-shades-c-85.html which would have the same effect, though the effectiveness of these alternate solutions rather depends whether the neighbour's window is opposite your home, to the side, or directly above you.

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My answer to this is classic potted Bamboo. Its the perfect screen, grows tall with a cool contemporary, beautiful aesthetic. I am a native New Zealander born and bred with no Asian bias to bamboo. If you could plant the bamboo in the earth I would recommend the bamboo species with the root system that clumps together and does not spread.

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Martha Stewart
marthastewart.com › backyard-plants-for-privacy-8765722
15 Plants to Add Privacy to Your Property, According to Landscape Designers
December 23, 2024 - Neese recommends the gardenia for its aroma and ability to provide privacy. You'll want to plant it in an area that gets bright but indirect light with both eastern and southern exposure. ... If you need a potted shrub to add privacy to your elevated deck or patio space, you might want to consider the fragrant flowering rosemary bush.
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Southern Living
southernliving.com › plants-for-privacy-7643312
18 Best Plants To Add Privacy To Your Yard
August 2, 2024 - We've listed the best plants for privacy including small trees, shrubs, vines, and tall grasses that screen views while blending seamlessly into the landscape.
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Southern Living Plants
southernlivingplants.com › pot up a privacy wall
Pot Up a Privacy Wall
January 15, 2024 - Hollies are also evergreen, providing privacy year-round. Lower-growing plantings can also be used to create a distraction. For example, you might stop people for looking through your front windows by setting a trio of Royal Hawaiian® ‘Waikiki’ Colocasia or Design-A-Line™ Cordyline in the foreground. Another benefit of using potted plants for your screening needs is the fabulous color combinations you can create with containers.
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Fine Gardening
finegardening.com › home › four ways to use container plantings for more privacy
Four Ways to Use Container Plantings for More Privacy - Fine Gardening
October 18, 2022 - Container plantings and living walls can do more than block undesirable views. In this backyard, glazed pots and custom Corten-steel planters give a sense of physical enclosure between garden rooms.