BBC Home
Stipa tenuissima
A huge range of grasses is available to be used right across the garden. Some give colourful low spread among feature plants, others add enormous striking clumps with wonderful flowering spikes, and others provide extraordinary height.
Watch Carol Klein's guide to saving and sowing seeds from ornamental grasses.
Play video clip
Grasses are the ultimate architectural plant, adding see-through effects, gentle rustling, autumn colour and winter shapes. They also tolerate a range of conditions, from gravel gardens to solid lumpy clay.
Grasses can be used in borders as individual eye-catchers, large or small, or repeated in drifts to create a natural look, with paths ambling through and between. Some can even be grown in containers, to help soften formal designs.
Be careful where you place these as they quickly form enormous clumps. Big grasses also demand lawn space so you can stand back and admire them.
The following are more easily accommodated in most borders.
Sedges are suitable for damp conditions. Britain's native sedge, Carex pendula , and the wiry-leaved, bronze C. buchananii are well worth trying, as is the variegated form of purple moor grass, Molinia caerulea . Its flowers and leaves are a soft blend of cream and green in summer, turning to pale parchment in autumn. All need constant moisture. The RHS has awarded C. buchananii its AGM.
You could also try:
The following are attractive in ornamental containers:
Most grasses are easy to grow, full sun being the main requirement, and most tolerate a wide range of soils.
Most perennial grasses are relatively easy to propagate by division. Do this in spring, not autumn, as some newly divided plants may rot before they've developed a good root system.
Many grasses produce young plants from seed, but special garden forms may not produce identical progeny. Wait to see if they're any good and use to fill gaps in borders.
The more nitrogen grasses receive, the greener and further they'll grow. This spreading habit is fine in a field, but in a garden they can become too lush and the flower quality may suffer.
Feed them in spring like ordinary perennials, with a single dressing of a general fertiliser. Even without an annual feed, most grasses will put on a first-rate show.
February is the time to cut your deciduous, ornamental grasses hard back and give them a thick mulch.
By and large, grasses are remarkably problem-free. Powdery mildew may afflict some in certain seasons, but it's hardly worth spraying them with a fungicide. Grazing rabbits, however, can cause considerable damage.
The biggest problem results from using large, invasive plants, such as Phalaris arundinacea and Holcus mollis 'Albovariegatus', in a small space. When buying, make sure you check the plant's final height and spread.
Arundo donax isn't completely hardy and needs protecting in freezing spells with a covering of thick mulch and bracken.
National Plant Collections of grasses:
Cortaderia selloana AJ Shipperley 20 Stockdales Road Eton Wick, Windsor Berkshire SL4 6LB Tel: 01753 858480
Miscanthus sinensis A Bloom Bressingham Gardens Bressingham, Diss Norfolk IP22 2AB Tel: 01379 686900 Website: (External) www.bressinghamgardens.co.uk
Molinia T Fuller The Plantsman's Preference Hopton Road Garboldisham, Diss Norfolk IP22 2QN Tel: 01953 681439 Website: (External) www.plantpref.co.uk
Back to top
Change Text Only Settings
Graphic version of this page