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03/06/2026

Hedgerow management rules: cutting and trimming.

These rules came into force on 23 May 2024.

The hedgerow management rules aim to protect hedgerows on agricultural land as these are important ecological building blocks across our landscapes. Hedgerows provide habitat, act as wildlife corridors, slow soil erosion and water run-off. They also support crop pollinators and sequester carbon as well as enriching the landscape.

There are hedgerow management rules on buffer strips and cutting and trimming.

Cutting and trimming rules
You must not cut or trim a hedgerow that is covered by the rules from 1 March to 31 August. You must not cause or permit another person to cut or trim such a hedgerow.

Check if the rules apply to a hedgerow
A hedgerow is a line of bushes which can include trees. Any trees growing in a hedgerow will be treated as part of the hedgerow. Where a line of trees does not meet this definition, and it is not being managed as a hedgerow, it will not be covered by the rules. The rules also include hedgerows on top of a traditional hedgerow bank.

The cutting and trimming rules apply to a hedgerow if it meets the criteria for both:

length
location
Length
The rules apply if a hedgerow is:

more than 20m long with gaps of 20m or less in its length

less than 20m long, but meets another hedgerow at each end

Any gap of 20 metres or less will be treated as part of the hedgerow.

Location
The rules apply if a hedgerow is growing on, or next to, land used for agriculture, including:

horticulture
fruit growing
seed growing
dairy farming
the breeding and keeping of livestock – this includes horses, ponies and any animal kept for its use in farming, or for the production of food, wool or skins
It includes grazing land, meadow land, osier land, market gardens, nursery grounds and allotments. And woodlands where agricultural activities take place.

It also includes hedgerows which are on agricultural land which borders other land such as golf courses and village halls.

Exemptions from the rules
Cutting or trimming is permitted from 1 March to 31 August in the following situations.

You do not need to notify the Rural Payments Agency (RPA) to ask for the exemptions listed. You must keep a record of all works that you carry out under an exemption. If you are visited by the RPA you must be able to prove how and why you relied on the exemption.

If you are relying on an exemption, you must only cut or trim the parts of the hedgerow that are needed for that exemption.

Public and private rights of way
The hedgerow overhangs a highway, road or footpath over which there is a public or private right of way and the overhanging hedgerow:

obstructs the passage of users
is a danger to users
The hedgerow:

obstructs the view of such users
obstructs the light from a public lamp
The hedgerow is dead, diseased, damaged or insecurely rooted. And because of its condition, it or part of it, is likely to cause danger by falling on to a highway, road or footpath.

Hedge-laying and coppicing
To carry out hedge-laying or coppicing during the period 1 March to 30 April. Or to trim a newly laid hedgerow by hand, within 6 months of it being laid.

Boundaries of a private garden
The hedgerow is within the curtilage of a dwelling house. Or the hedgerow marks the boundary of the curtilage of a dwelling house (this applies to both sides of the hedgerow).

Risks to plant, human or animal health
You need to prevent or treat serious causes of harm to plant health. Or there is a risk to human or animal health or safety.

W**d or pest infestations
You need to prevent or treat a serious pest or w**d infestation.

Work required by a statutory body
Work is carried out by any statutory body (for example a utility company) acting under statutory powers.

Exemptions when sowing oilseed r**e or temporary grass in August
You need to notify the RPA each year before you can cut or trim a hedgerow in August to sow oilseed r**e or temporary grassland during the same August. Temporary grassland includes the sowing of any mix which includes grass.

You must keep a record of all works that you carry out under an exemption. If you are visited by the RPA you must be able to prove how and why you relied on the exemption.

Cutting or trimming is only permitted on:

the in-field side of the hedgerow (and the top of the hedgerow if it’s not possible to cut it from an adjoining field)
the length of the hedgerow next to where you will sow the oilseed r**e or temporary grass
You must also check the length of the whole hedgerow for birds, nests and eggs. If you find any, you:

cannot cut or trim that hedgerow
must follow your responsibilities under the Wildlife and Countryside Act 1981
Notify the RPA before trimming or cutting a hedgerow to sow oil seed r**e or temporary grassland
To notify, you must email or write to the RPA.

You should:

include details of the crop to be sown
all relevant land parcel numbers
use the subject heading ‘Hedgerow management cutting and trimming rules notification’
You do not need to wait for written permission before carrying out any work. As long as you meet the rules of this provision, you only need to make sure your notification is received by the RPA. You should make sure therefore that you receive an acknowledgement of your notification from the RPA before carrying out any work. For email notifications, we’ll send you an email receipt which will include a unique reference number.

When you need written permission (derogations) for exemption from the rules
You can apply to the RPA for written permission (a derogation) to be exempt from the cutting or trimming rules between 1 March and 31 August. A derogation could be granted for any of the following reasons:

it would enhance the environment
it is necessary in relation to livestock or crop production
it would improve public or agricultural access
How to apply for written permission (a derogation)
To apply for a derogation, you must email or write to the RPA.

You should:

send all the available evidence (for example, photographs or diagrams)
explain what you want to do
include the land parcel numbers you want the derogation for
use the subject heading ‘Hedgerow management rules derogation’
You must wait for the RPA to consider your request and grant any successful derogation in writing before carrying out any work.

Exemptions are limited to the hedgerow management rules
These exemptions only apply to the hedgerow management rules on cutting and trimming. When carrying out any actions related to the above exemptions, you must follow any other rules or legislation in place, for example, the Wildlife and Countryside Act 1981.

Report a suspected breach of the rules
Please read these rules carefully before reporting a suspected breach.

There are some exemptions from these rules which allow for cutting and trimming during the non-cutting period. For example, there is a public and private rights of way exemption that allows hedgerows to be cut or trimmed for road safety purposes. The rules also do not apply to boundaries of a private garden.

The hedgerow management rules only cover cutting and trimming. They do not cover the removal of hedgerows which remains the responsibility of Local Authorities. For more information read Countryside hedgerow protection: removing hedgerows. You will find details here on how to report a possible removal of a hedgerow.

Provide as much information as possible, including location, timings and photographs if you have them.

To report a suspected breach, use the online form.

Start now

If you cannot complete the online form
If you are not able to complete the form, you can telephone or write to the RPA to report the suspected breach.

What to expect on a visit by the Rural Payments Agency
The RPA is the regulator for these rules and may visit your land to check compliance with these regulations. The RPA could gather evidence during any visit, for example, copies of records or documents or take photographs. Where circumstances make it necessary to gather immediate evidence, or to prevent harm to hedgerows, visits could take place with little or no notice.

The RPA will discuss their findings with you before leaving. You will receive written confirmation of their findings which will include any advice and guidance. The RPA will work with you to ensure you are supported to comply with regulations, taking a fair and proportionate approach to enforcement.

You must allow any visit to take place. Any person who wilfully obstructs an RPA officer is guilty of an offence and could be liable to a fine of up to £1000.

Offences and enforcement
These rules came into force on 23 May 2024. You will have committed an offence if you do not follow the rules from this date.

Where the RPA finds you have not followed the rules, it will use an outcome focused approach. This approach is supportive of those the RPA regulates doing the right thing but allows it to take action in the more serious cases.

Advice and guidance will be prioritised before taking enforcement action unless in cases of significant harm. The RPA will use appropriate interventions aimed at helping those it regulates to comply.

Enforcement action could include either civil sanctions (Stop Notices, Compliance Notices, Restoration Notices and Variable Monetary Penalties) or prosecution.

RPA held a 6-week public consultation (29 October 2024 to 10 December 2024) on how to implement and enforce the civil sanctions set out in the statutory guidance. The consultation was required by the Regulatory Enforcement and Sanctions Act 2008.

You can read the Government’s consultation response and the final Statutory Guidance for the management of hedgerows which RPA published on 19 February 2025.

Contact details
Telephone: 03000 200 301
Monday to Friday, 8.30am to 5pm.

Email: [email protected]

Address:

Rural Payments
PO Box 352
Worksop
S80 9FG

Four plants in the same family. All have umbrella-shaped white flower clusters. All have divided feathery leaves. Three ...
03/06/2026

Four plants in the same family. All have umbrella-shaped white flower clusters. All have divided feathery leaves. Three of them will hurt you in completely different ways.

The 3-second field check:

Is it taller than you with massive leaves? Giant hogw**d. The sap causes severe blistering burns when skin is exposed to sunlight afterward. Do not touch. Do not cut. Report to your county extension office.

Are the flowers yellow? Wild parsnip. Same phototoxic sap as giant hogw**d. Same burn risk. The yellow color is the diagnostic — if the umbrella flowers are yellow, don't touch any part of it.

Is the stem smooth with purple blotches? Poison hemlock. Crush a leaf — it smells musty, not like carrot. Toxic in every part of the plant. Grows in ditches and roadsides across the US.

Is the stem hairy with no blotches? Queen Anne's lace. Crush a leaf or root — it smells like carrot. Flat cluster that curls into a bird's nest shape as it dries. Not toxic.

The sequence: size first, then flower color, then stem, then smell. Four checks. Four answers.

When unsure, leave it. The safe one has a hairy stem and smells like carrot. Everything else gets distance

The internet says cut iris leaves for better blooms. The comment section says they never touch theirs and bloom fine. Th...
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The internet says cut iris leaves for better blooms. The comment section says they never touch theirs and bloom fine. The leaf debate is hiding the real reasons iris stops flowering.

Cut the flower stalk to the base after blooming. Leave every green leaf standing — she needs them to store energy for next year's buds. Remove dead brown foliage in fall.

🌿 The actual reasons iris stops blooming:

- Too crowded — rhizomes multiply outward every year. After three to four years the center is exhausted and stops flowering. Divide in July or August. Keep the firm outer rhizomes, discard the woody center.

- Planted too deep — the top of the rhizome needs to sit exposed at the soil surface, baking in the sun. Think of it as a crab on the beach, not buried in it. A buried rhizome rots or refuses to bloom.

- Too much shade — iris needs six hours of direct sun minimum. As surrounding trees grow taller over the years, a bed that used to bloom can slowly shade out.

- Late frost killed the buds — if she made leaves but no flowers after a late freeze, the buds froze. The plant is fine. Next year recovers if frost doesn't repeat.

Cut the stalk. Leave the green leaves. Clean up the brown. Divide every three to four years. That covers most iris bloom failures 🌱

Half the bugs people panic over and spray are the ones doing the pest control for free.Each of these is a predator or a ...
03/06/2026

Half the bugs people panic over and spray are the ones doing the pest control for free.
Each of these is a predator or a parasite of the pests that actually damage your plants. A garden full of them needs almost no spray — because the spray is what wipes them out first.

- Ladybug — Adult and Larva Both Hunt
The adult eats aphids. The spiny black-and-orange larva eats MORE aphids — up to 200 before it pupates. Also eats mites and soft scale. The larva looks like a tiny alligator and most people kill it because they don't recognize it. Learn what it looks like.

- Green Lacewing — The Aphid Lion
The adult is a delicate green insect attracted to porch lights. The larva is the weapon — called an "aphid lion," it clears aphids, mites, and pest eggs by the hundreds. One larva eats 200+ aphids before pupating. The adult drinks nectar. The larva does the killing.

- Hoverfly — Pollinator and Predator in One Lifecycle
The adult looks like a small bee but doesn't sting — a harmless mimic that pollinates your flowers. The larva is a translucent slug-like creature that eats entire aphid colonies overnight. Two jobs from one insect, split between life stages.

- Parasitic Wasp — Tiny, Harmless to You, Devastating to Pests
Most are smaller than a grain of rice. They lay eggs inside caterpillars, aphids, and whiteflies. The larvae consume the host from within. The white cocoons on a hornworm's back are parasitic wasp pupae — the wasp already won. Never kill a parasitized caterpillar.

- Ground Beetle — The Night Shift
Works after dark when you're inside. Patrols the soil surface eating slugs, cutworms, and root maggots. You rarely see them because they hide under mulch and debris during the day. A garden with ground beetles has fewer slug problems without a single pellet of bait.

- Soldier Beetle — The Soft Red-and-Black One
Soft wing covers, typically orange-red and black. Eats aphids on your flower heads while simultaneously pollinating. Harmless. Abundant in late summer on goldenrod and yarrow. People swat them thinking they're pests. They're not.

- Minute Pirate Bug — The Speck-Sized Assassin
Two to three millimeters long. Barely visible. Destroys thrips, spider mites, and pest eggs — the tiny pests that are nearly impossible to control with sprays. Commercial greenhouses BUY these. Your garden can grow them for free if you stop spraying.

Before you reach for a bottle, look closer. Some of those bugs are the reason you don't have more.

01/06/2026
These Garden Caterpillars Become Beautiful Butterflies 🦋1️⃣ Swallowtail Caterpillar Bright green with black stripes and ...
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These Garden Caterpillars Become Beautiful Butterflies 🦋

1️⃣ Swallowtail Caterpillar
Bright green with black stripes and orange dots. It transforms into one of Europe’s most stunning butterflies.

2️⃣ Peacock Butterfly Caterpillar
Black and spiky with tiny white dots. Often found feeding on nettles.

3️⃣ Camberwell Beauty Caterpillar
Dark with branched spikes and reddish markings. Rare and unforgettable when spotted.

4️⃣ Small Tortoiseshell Caterpillar
Black with yellow dots and fine spikes. Very common in gardens and around nettles.

5️⃣ Brimstone Caterpillar
Smooth green body that blends perfectly into leaves — almost invisible.

6️⃣ Red Admiral Caterpillar
Spiky and darker in color, often appearing toward the end of summer.

7️⃣ Death’s-head Hawk Moth Caterpillar
Large green caterpillar with diagonal stripes that becomes one of Europe’s biggest moths.

A lot of people see caterpillars and instantly think “garden pest” 😅
Without realizing they’re looking at future butterflies and moths.

Before removing one… take a closer look first 🦋

You can't beat a good neatly cut lawn, 1st job done this morning.
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You can't beat a good neatly cut lawn, 1st job done this morning.

Something a bit different to do this morning, A gutter clean out and  then a bit of spring cleaning of washing the gutte...
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Something a bit different to do this morning,
A gutter clean out and then a bit of spring cleaning of washing the gutters back to white.

Lawns all cut, stream trimmed back, looking good for the weekend.
01/05/2026

Lawns all cut, stream trimmed back, looking good for the weekend.

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