How to make a dead hedge

Learn how to make a wildlife-friendly hedge, useful for both gardeners and wild animals alike.

Find out how recycling garden cuttings to make a traditional dead hedge structure provides a shelter for wildlife, while helping gardeners keep their outdoor space tidy.

  • Suitable for: Adults, and children with their adults!
  • Season: All year round

Martyn Wilson, designer of The RSPCA Garden for the RHS Chelsea Flower Show 2023, explains how beneficial a dead hedge is for a garden, and the creatures that visit it.

"We're often told that leaving piles of wood, stones or garden cuttings around is good for wildlife. And it's true that wild areas like these make great habitats. But what if, like me, you prefer your garden a bit tidier?

A dead hedge is the perfect compromise. Made from upright stakes of wood and filled with horizontal prunings, it adds structure to your garden and becomes a feature in itself. They’re a clever way to divide your garden or hide things like compost bins. Plus, it recycles pruning matter that's too hard to compost, so you don't have to burn it or throw it away.

Contrary to its name, it'll soon be teeming with life, providing habitats for many species of wildlife."

In The RSPCA Garden, the dead hedges sit inside bench-like open structures made from rust-effect, weathered steel – we've even included hedgehog boxes in the bottom of ours!

Now you can build your own. Here’s how to make a gardener-approved and wildlife-friendly dead hedge shelter.
Rust-effect steel garden structure filled with twigs and branches, forming a tidy dead hedge surrounded by wildflowers.

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Make your dead hedge

Instructions

  • 1 Choose where you'd like to put your hedge, and how long you want it to be. Dead hedges make great windbreakers around vegetable patches, flower beds or seating areas. 
  • 2 Mark out the area with string. The hedge should be around 50cm wide. 
  • 3 Add at least three stakes at regular intervals (around 50cm apart) on each side of the hedge. If they're offset they'll help keep more material in place. Once you're happy with the design, use the mallet to knock the stakes firmly into the ground. This is now the frame that will hold all your garden prunings and fill up to become your ‘hedge’. 
  • 4 Put some longer, thicker branches and sticks in first, to create a stronger structure. Use your loppers or secateurs to cut them to the right length and place them inside.
  • 5 Add in any woody cuttings you have over time. As they rot down, they'll add nutrients to the soil below. Keep topping up your hedge – but try not to disturb it.
     

What you'll need

At least 6 sturdy stakes (30cm or so taller than you'd like the hedge to be)


A mallet


Garden string to mark out the plot


Strong secateurs (garden clippers) or loppers

Watch our dead hedge building video.

Birds, insects, reptiles, invertebrates, amphibians and small mammals will soon move in to make it their home or forage for food. 

Martyn Wilson, The RSPCA Garden designer

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Decorated apple perched on a twig in a garden hedge under a bright blue sky.

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