Richard and a gardening crew installed the side yard border and privacy planting on Saturday May 16, 2026, and seeded several beds in the front yard the same day. The bed is roughly 85% complete. The remaining install work is sourcing and planting a third holly for pollination, and the next twelve months are watering, monitoring, and documentation.
The structural plantings landed on the side yard on May 16. Specifics on quantity and variety for the supporting plants still need to be captured from Richard before the tags fade.
Holly (Ilex) is dioecious. Female plants produce the red berries holly is known for, but only when a male of the same or compatible species is within roughly 30 to 50 feet for pollination. If both installed hollies turn out to be the same sex, neither will flower or fruit. The fix is to plant a third holly of the opposite gender within pollination range.
Next moves:
New plantings die from underwatering more than anything else in Year 1. Two deep soaks a week, spaced 3 to 4 days apart, is the working rhythm through summer and fall until the first hard frost. Skip a session only if there has been a soaking rain in the prior 24 hours.
How to water:
When to override the schedule:
Most of the planting is set and should not be touched in Year 1 to let it establish. The exceptions are damaged limbs, crossing branches that will rub, and any sucker growth from the base of the hollies or yews.
Mulch laid on May 16 will compact and decompose. By late summer it may need a refresh in spots.
The first 90 days post-install are when transplant shock shows up. Catch it early.
Mulch suppresses most. What gets through gets pulled before it sets seed.
The plant tags are already fading. Richard will not always be the gardener. Without a recorded inventory, in three years no one will remember which yew is which or where the small understory plants came from. The next session at the Manor should close this loop.