Shop Products
Houzz Logo Print
skrimpy_gw

ID of grass

skrimpy
12 years ago

wow...I posted a message and somehow it didn't go! Copy and paste the below address. It's an ofoto album. The grass in the pictures gets about 9 feet tall at my father's house but he has a hard time transplanting it.

I'm trying to ID this grass and find out:

1. Best soil for it

2. Best amount of water for it

3. Best fertilizer for it.

Thanks

Dan

http://www.kodakgallery.com/gallery/creativeapps/slideShow/Main.jsp?sourceId=533754321803&cm_mmc=eMail-_-Share-_-Photos-_-Sharee

Comments (23)

  • donn_
    12 years ago

    Link doesn't work.

  • skrimpy
    Original Author
    12 years ago

    There's a little on the second line... You're link should include the "_-Sharee" that you see underneath the link. Plus it didn't post as a link. Have to copy and paste to the browser.

  • donn_
    12 years ago

    Tried that. This is what I get:

    A blank browser.

  • skrimpy
    Original Author
    12 years ago

    hmmm...I copied and pasted and it worked....Let me see what I can do with it. I might be able to post the pic in another forum...might not have much to do with gardening but I can post pics there none the less. Try this one.

    http://forum.treasurenet.com/index.php/topic,403083.0.html

  • donn_
    12 years ago

    That works:

    Looks like it might be one of the cultivars of Arundo donax 'variegata.' How tall does it get?

  • donn_
    12 years ago

    I re-read the first post. 9 feet.

    Almost certainly Arundo.

  • donn_
    12 years ago

    "1. Best soil for it
    2. Best amount of water for it
    3. Best fertilizer for it. "

    1. Plain old soil..good drainage.
    2. Average water...not too much.
    3. None needed, though some folks use lawn fertilizer.

    Is your dad in zone 5? These things are usually rated hardy to zone 6.

  • skrimpy
    Original Author
    12 years ago

    He's in Baltimore (what is that zone 6 maybe 7?) but a friend of mine here in Albany got this thing (he got it from my father too) to go about 7 feet and it comes back every year but I thought maybe I could do some things to make it get to it's fullest potential by covering it with clear plastic in the early spring and try to keep the frost off it etc.

  • skrimpy
    Original Author
    12 years ago

    So I just looked this thing up and in some places it gets 15 feet. hmmm. maybe my father's gets that large.

  • donn_
    12 years ago

    I've got a pair of them, the cultivar 'Peppermint Stick.' They're only 2 years old, and hit 8' at the bloom last year.

    The bloom:

  • skrimpy
    Original Author
    12 years ago

    Awesome. I want to make a hedge row with them.

  • skrimpy
    Original Author
    12 years ago

    Alright. I don't think it's Arundo. This doesn't have shoots. It's just grass. It doesn't have the shoots with the blades coming off from it. It only has the blades coming up out of the ground. Someone is telling me "ribbon grass" but I haven't found anything on it yet.

  • donn_
    12 years ago

    Good luck. I love it when people test the "zone rules" with grasses.

    Don't plant them too close together. They spread by rhizomes, and will fill in a line quickly. You might also consider installing a root barrier, like Bamboo barrier to control the depth of the hedge, because they spread in all directions. Root pruning will also work. I got new shoots as much as 2' away from the core plants this year.

  • skrimpy
    Original Author
    12 years ago

    Not ribbon grass either. Ribbon grass is only 3-4 feet tall. grrrrrr. What the heck is this thing?

  • skrimpy
    Original Author
    12 years ago

    Now that I look at it, it does have shoots but I don't remember them having several bladed coming off from them in your pictures. I know they grow like crazy if they take hold and really need to be controlled. I was planning some kind of root barrier to keep them confined. I wanted to put them as a hedge underneath my post and beam fence b/c its such a PITA to mow under the thing. If I had this I could just mow right next to it and not worry about underneath the fence. I also thought it would look neat with the posts and beams poking through and by late summer I wouldn't even see the fence at all!

  • donn_
    12 years ago

    Ribbon Grass, AKA Phalaris arundinacea, never gets that tall.

    Miscanthus sinensis 'Variegatus' under ideal conditions may reach 8' at the blooms.

    Have you seen the blooms on your father's plant? You can't mistake Miscanthus blooms.

  • skrimpy
    Original Author
    12 years ago

    Haven't seen my father's blooms but judging from your picture above, if miscanthus has the white stripes like the arundo but not the numerous blades coming off from the shoots it's more likely the miscanthus. Im thinking Im going to run this over to the garden center before I put it in the ground today although I doubt they will know what it is

  • skrimpy
    Original Author
    12 years ago

    Haven't seen my father's blooms but judging from your picture above, if miscanthus has the white stripes like the arundo but not the numerous blades coming off from the shoots it's more likely the miscanthus. Im thinking Im going to run this over to the garden center before I put it in the ground today although I doubt they will know what it is

  • skrimpy
    Original Author
    12 years ago

    Haven't seen my father's blooms but judging from your picture above, if miscanthus has the white stripes like the arundo but not the numerous blades coming off from the shoots it's more likely the miscanthus. Im thinking Im going to run this over to the garden center before I put it in the ground today although I doubt they will know what it is

  • skrimpy
    Original Author
    12 years ago

    Ok. So the guy at the garden center came to two possible conclusions based on the plant itself (it was still out of the ground at the time...now it isn't). He said it's either Japanese Silver Grass or Variegated Miscanthus. I asked him about the size because everything I saw online was that Japanese Silver Grass doesn't get that tall. He said, "Well, there maybe a zone thing there in Baltimore, it could still be Japanese Silver Grass", but it's more likely Miscanthus. I think I may have an ID between you guys and the garden center.

  • donn_
    12 years ago

    Beware of Garden Centers and Common Names.

    "Japanese Silver Grass" is Miscanthus sinensis.

    There are two Miscanthus sinensis (that I know of) with variegation like the grass in your pictures; Miscanthus sinensis 'Variegatus' and Miscanthus sinensis var. condensatus 'Cabaret.' Both can reach 7' to the foliage and 8' to the blossoms, under ideal conditions. Ideal conditions would be, I would think, a warmer climate than Baltimore. I suppose it's possible one could grow taller, but it would be unusual. In my experience, Miscanthus grows shorter than most of the ratings indicate.

  • skrimpy
    Original Author
    12 years ago

    Well than maybe it's what was the other option someone mentioned, "Maiden Grass"? I don't know. The thing at my father's house is taller than me standing on the porch next to it which is at least 7 1/2 feet. I actually have to reach up to grab the top of the reeds. It has to be at least 8-10 feet. Maybe he's just got it in a really good spot...or he's got some kind of mutant, lucky me!

  • buyorsell888
    12 years ago

    Maiden Grass is yet another common name for Miscanthus.

Sponsored
Hoppy Design & Build
Average rating: 5 out of 5 stars9 Reviews
Northern VA Award-Winning Deck ,Patio, & Landscape Design Build Firm