Birmingham Post

Watching the grasses grow

- With Diarmuid Gavin

DURING late summer, the contempora­ry garden takes on different textures and colours as a new palette of plants matures. It’s peak time for many of the ornamental grasses that have started flowering and will continue to do so until autumn.

Some grasses, such as Miscanthus, will look superb right through winter, standing tall with flowerhead­s that remain intact, albeit fading to silver. I don’t cut these back until around March or April as they are still providing good interest before the spring perennials really take off. In larger scale landscapin­g, they can look wonderful planted en masse, but in the smaller garden, that approach doesn’t always work so well.

I think they’re often best planted in combinatio­n, either with colourful perennials or evergreen plantings so that some structural interest remains once the more delicate grasses collapse at the end of the season.

Grasses are relatively lowmainten­ance, though if you have a lot of them, the annual cutting back can be quite a job.

Using evergreen varieties such as Carex morrowii will lessen the work. These can get a little scruffy, so benefit from a cut back every few years to allow for fresh clean growth.

There’s great versatilit­y to be found with this type of planting, with varieties suitable for both sun and shade positions, and damp or dry conditions. Taller columnar types make good focal points or upright accents in a border, while the fountain-shape types look really well in pots.

Here are some ideas of how to combine them with other plants:

Stipa gigantea is the graceful giant of the grass world, achieving heights of over 2.5 metres, but because the stems are so see-through and the fountain of golden oat-like flowers is light and airy, it never overpowers. Gorgeous paired with Verbena bonariensi­s, which has little balls of mauve flowers which seem to float atop leggy stems, as well as Sanguisorb­a with its bottlebrus­h flowers on tall stems.

Pennisetum, Chinese fountain grass, has fluffy bottlebrus­h flowers which tempt you to caress them. ‘Karley Rose’ has lovely rose purple flower spikes and I’ve planted them beside buxus balls to loosen the planting scheme.

For smaller gardens, ‘Little Bunny’ is more compact and would associate well with late-flowering perennials

 ??  ?? Hakonechlo­a macra Aureola ornamental grasses planted underneath a deciduous tree
Hakonechlo­a macra Aureola ornamental grasses planted underneath a deciduous tree
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom