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Also known as boxes or buxus, boxwood shrubs are the ideal plantation for landscaping and edging your garden. Boxwood is a hardy, versatile, slow growing evergreen, however there are many varieties and some grow faster than others. When I moved into my current home, the front yard was filled with a bunch of evergreen boxwood shrubs. It was a great moment when this superb Achemon Sphinx thundered up to the sheet whilst I was helping out with a moth event in Norfolk County, Ontario on Saturday night.

The glacial era is blamed for wiping out boxwood in England, as evidence of pollen grains were found in charcoal that dated back to 2000 BC. It is said that the Romans re-established boxwood in England where it now has become naturalized and is considered a native there.

This is quite convenient for some boxwood lovers since much of their foliage can be brought into the home to add to the winter decorations. If you are living in the urban areas, it is imperative to install large faux hedges or artificial boxwood hedges in your front yard if you want to keep your property free from cacophonous sounds or unwanted sights coming from the neighborhood.

Preparation and planting are also easy to do. Some pointers include giving the boxwood partial sunlight, though it is able to take a spot with full sun exposure as well. The following are the advantages of artificial boxwood hedges in the life of every individual especially for those who are looking for privacy and safety.

Boxwood is a hardy, versatile, slow growing evergreen, however there are many varieties and some grow faster than others. When I moved into my current home, the front yard was filled with a bunch of evergreen boxwood shrubs. It was a great moment when this superb Achemon Sphinx thundered up to the sheet whilst I was helping out with a moth event in Norfolk County, Ontario on Saturday night.

The American Boxwood is easily the most versatile and useful Boxwood when it comes to creating outdoor plants. All boxwood shrubs have broad, shallow roots, so you have to be careful not to cultivate very closely around them as the digging and planting might cause damage to their fragile root system.

In first century BC in Greece, wealthy Romans not only graced their villas with boxwood plantings, often in topiary form, but also chose this spectacular hard wood to make assorted boxes, both decorative and practical, hand-carved ornaments, flutes, utensils, wood overlay, combs and tablets.

The American Boxwood can grow all the way up to 20 feet tall if not trimmed or trained. These simulated boxwood hedges can be used in a variety of settings outdoor as well as indoor. They were introduced to America in 1652 when Nathaniel Sylvester of Shetter Island (NW part of Long Island) New York received a shipment of Buxus sempervirens boxwood from Amsterdam to plant around the manor he built on his plantation.