|
.
Site map
[ What is a Garden ]
[ The Gov. and the scientist. ]
[ Frequent Questions ]
[ Landscape horticulture ] [ The Biosphere ]
[ NM Soils ]
[ Botany ]
[ Native Trees and Shrubs ]
[ Plants for NM ]
[ Vegetable Varieties ]
[ Fruits ]
[ Grass1 ]
[ Plant Disease Defined ]
[ Pest Management (IPM) ]
[ Weeds ]
[ Water Gardening ]
[ Drip Irrigation ]
[ Composting ]
[ House plants ]
[ Other Resources ]
What's New
Tomatoes 2008
Composting.ppt
Iris with music.ppt
Flowers and
bulbs in garden.ppt
| |
Ornamental Grasses
for New Mexico
Ornamental grasses are used infrequently in New Mexico gardens
and landscapes but nationwide they have received much attention. Annual or
perennial, clumping or sod-forming, tall or
short, native or exotic, grasses can be used in many places and for all
seasons. In addition to the common use as lawns and turf, grasses can form
borders, hedgerows, backdrops, screens, contrasts, add to a native
landscape, or just be interesting and beautiful in their own right. They are attractive, not only for their graceful and delicate flower
clusters, but also for their alluring plumes, ornate foliage, and majestic
tussocks.
There are various species, forms, and types of grasses that are useful in
landscaping. Gardeners must consider sun or shade tolerance, invasiveness,
water requirements, soil adaptations, winter hardiness, weed potential,
mode of propagation, and growth characteristics such as height and season
when deciding on a landscape grass. Grasses with variegated foliage, for
example, often blister or discolor when grown in full sunlight. Other
grasses spread by vigorous underground rhizomes or an abundance of seed, which limits their use to
specific sites where this will not be a problem. When choosing grasses, the type of
garden, whether in formal or informal, rock, mixed border, or water
gardens desired must be carefully considered.
Here we have divided Grasses into size classes of Short
(up to 2 feet), Medium (2 to 5 feet), and Tall (more than 5 feet) as
follows. These
lists include both native and exotic species. Several are plentiful on the
prairies, canyons, and mesas of New Mexico where seed or root stocks can
be gathered. Many, including most exotic species, can be bought at
commercial nurseries and seed companies. The common and scientific names,
a description, planting and care, propagation, and landscaping and garden
uses are given for each grass.
Short Grasses (to 2 feet tall)
Blue Fescue (Festuca ovina var. glauca)
- Description: Perennial bunchgrass 4 to 12 inches tall, forming
blue-gray mounds 8 to 12 inches in diameter. Foliage leaves are
thread-like and densely clumped in a small fountain shape. Flowers are
in small heads above the foliage.
- Planting and care: Blue fescue is a cool-season grass that can be
grown throughout the state if well-watered in hot, dry areas. It thrives
in diverse sites, in sun or shade and in moist or dry conditions, but
needs extra water during hot weather. The center may die out in larger
clumps and these should be split.
- Propagation: By seed or division of large clumps.
- Uses: Blue fescue can be used as a border in flower gardens, as a
garden accent, and in hanging baskets or boxes. Several varieties are
available.
Blue Grama (Bouteloua gracilis)
- Description: Perennial bunchgrass I to 2 feet tall, but with slowly
spreading underground runners (rhizomes) that form a rough sod. Foliage
is light green, low and dense. Flowers held in curving brushes atop
slender stems. This is the state grass of New Mexico.
- Planting and care. Blue grama is a warm-season grass. It is found
naturally throughout New Mexico in a wide variety of soils and habitats,
but thrives best in full sun on loamy or sandy loam soils. Clumps tend
to die out in the center as they mature, sometimes forming so-called
fairy rings. Seed is easily obtained commercially or can be gathered by
hand. Sow in fall.
- Propagation: By seed and plant division.
- Uses: Blue grama is a native range grass, often used for low
maintenance lawns because it requires little or no mowing. It also shows
promise for dried arrangements, native landscaping, or edge effects
along walks and gardens. A close relative, hairy grama (Bouteloua
hirsuta), is more tolerant of drought and calcareous soils.
Foxtail Barley (Hordeum jubatum)
- Description: Perennial, although sometimes short-lived, bunchgrass 1
to 2 feet tall. Foliage is light green or greenish yellow. Flowers
appear in attractive, golden-yellow, long-bristly spikes, which break
into wind-borne segments when dry.
- Planting and care: Foxtail barley is a cool-season grass. It grows
best in full sun on well-drained soils but will go dormant during hot
periods in the desert areas. Sow during fall or, early spring, watering
frequently. Plants may become weedy.
- Propagation: By seed,
- Uses: Foxtail barley is an extremely attractive plant when grown in
dense clumps among broad-leaved ornamentals, or to add accents and
contrasts to drives, rock gardens, and backdrops. The shattered seed
heads may be a bit messy or troublesome.
Indian Ricegrass (Oryzopsis hymenoides)
- Description: Perennial, densely-tufted bunch grasses I to 2 feet
tall. Foliage is light to bluish green and fine-leaved in arching
sprays. Flowers are borne in stiffly branched, airy clusters, with hairy
seeds protruding.
- Planting and care: Indian ricegrass is a cool-season grass, growing
during spring and fall. It thrives in full sun in dry, loose, sandy
soil. It is drought tolerant, but it is not suited to poorly drained
sites.
- Propagation: By seed, readily available from commercial sources, or
it can be gathered from native plants.
- Uses: Indian ricegrass is widely used for range restoration and
erosion control. A clump of seed heads makes an attractive dried
bouquet. Plants are suitable for rock gardens and native plant
landscapes.
Orchard-grass (Dactylis glomerata)
- Description: Perennial bunchgrass 2 to 4 feet tall, growing in small
clumps or tussocks. Leaves are solid dark or medium green, or
silvery-striped in the variety 'Variegata'. Flowers are in stiff,
greenish clusters at the tips of the stems.
- Planting and care: Orchard grass is a cool-season grass from Europe
that should be sown in fall or early spring. Flowering stalks can be
clipped back to maintain attractive foliage growth. The striped form
prefers partial shade and may turn brown in early fall.
- Propagation: By seed, which is readily available, or by division of
large clumps. Striped plants rarely produce seed heads.
- Uses: The striped-leaved form makes an attractive border or cover
for bare spots in a garden, or can be used as a small backdrop. This
species is used extensively for forage in irrigated pastures and
meadows.
Purple Threeawn (Aristida purpurea)
- Description: Perennial, densely-tufted grasses I to 2 feet tall.
Foliage is medium to light green and fine textured. Flowers are arrayed
in plume-like, nodding, purplish seed heads with long bristles,
- Planting and care: Purple threeawn is a warm-season grass and
prefers full sun in well-drained soils. It is extremely drought
tolerant. Seed may be gathered from native plants throughout the plains,
prairies, and desert areas of the state.
- Propagation: By seed or plant division of large clumps.
- Uses: Purple threeawn creates an attractive accent in native plant
gardens. The delicate, purplish plumes contrast nicely with other
foliage and background plants.
Rabbitfoot-grass (Polypogon monspeliensis)
- Description: Loosely-tufted annuals I to 2 feet tall. Foliage is
medium green, medium textured, with flat blades. Flowers are clustered
in dense, furry rabbitfoot-like heads 2-6 inches long.
- Planting and care: Rabbitfoot-grass is a cool-season grass that
prefers full sun or light shade. It flourishes in fertile, moist to wet,
well-drained soils around seeps, springs, irrigation ditches, ponds, and
streams.
- Propagation: By seed, which can be gathered from wild plants,
- Uses: Rabbitfoot-grass is grown for the attractive seed heads, which
are used in fresh and dried arrangements. It can also provide an accent
for annual borders and in foreground mixes.
Redtop (Agrostis stolonifera & A. gigantea, syn. A.
alba)
- Description: Perennial, tufted grasses 1 to 2 feet tall. Some plants
spread from underground runners (rhizomes) and form dense stands.
Foliage is greenish yellow to bluish green, and fine textured. Flowers
are displayed in delicate, reddish, pyramidal seed heads at the end of
stems.
- Planting and care: Redtop is a cool-season grass, preferring full
sun and moist soils in mountain regions. Plants do not withstand hot,
dry weather. Plants can be gathered in the mountains and along ditch
banks in the cooler regions of the state.
- Propagation: By seeds or root stocks, which should be sown or
planted in spring.
- Uses: Redtop is a widely used pasture grass throughout the United
States, but it also makes an attractive addition to a mixed garden or
meadow area with moist, loamy soils, or as a border along ponds or
streams. It is most effective as an ornamental when planted in rather
thick stands, which accents the feathery seed heads.
Sideoats Grama (Bouteloua curtipendula)
- Description: Perennial bunchgrass Ito 2 feet tall. Foliage is light
green, generally low, and rather coarse. Flowers are borne on little
flags usually on one side of the slender stems (whence the name,
sideoats), which break off and fall to the ground as the seed head
matures.
- Planting and care: Sideoats grama is a warm-season grass found
naturally throughout most of New Mexico. It prefers full sun in
calcareous soil and is drought tolerant. Clumps become a bit scraggly
and coarse with age and should be thinned or divided.
- Propagation: By seed, which should be sown in fall, or division of
large clumps. Seed is available commercially.
- Uses: The little flags of the seed heads make a delightful accent
mixed in native landscapes, or as a backdrop or comer effect in rock and
cactus gardens. I
Medium Grasses (2-5 feet
tall)
Big Bluestem (Andropogon gerardii)
- Description: Perennial, scraggly bunchgrasses 3 to 7 ft tall. some
plants also spread by underground runners (rhizomes), especially in
sandy soil. Foliage is gray-green, turning reddish or purplish in the
fall. Flowers are displayed in dark, turkeyfoot like branches rising
above the leaves at the tips of the shoots.
- Planting and care: Big bluestem, a common warm-season grass of the
prairie and plains regions of the state, grows best in light,
well-drained soils. With ample ground water, it thrives in hot, dry
sites in full sun. The forms with underground runners must be contained.
- Propagation: By seed or root stocks. The seed is easily available
commercially or can be gathered by hand.
- Uses: Big bluestem can be put to many landscaping uses, as a border,
backdrop, screen, living fence or hedge, and to give fall colors. Dried
seed heads are sometimes used in flower arrangements.
Canada Wildrye (Elymus canadensis)
- Description: Perennial bunchgrass 2to5 feet tall. Leaves are flat,
4-8 inches long, bluish to gray-green. Flowers are clustered in nodding,
bristly spikes raised above the foliage.
- Planting and care: Canada wildrye is a cool-season grass that occurs
naturally throughout the state, along streams and ditch banks. It
thrives in full sun or light shade in moist, sandy or loamy soil.
- Propagation: By seed and division of large clumps. Seed is available
commercially or can be gathered by hand.
- Uses: The foxtail-like flowering clusters and bluish-green foliage
make an attractive contrast, backdrop, or accent.
Fountain-grass (Pennisetum setaceum, syn. P. ruppelii)
- Description: Perennial bunchgrass in rounded clumps 2 to 4 feet tall
and 2 feet in diameter. Foliage is a rusty green, with straight to
arching leaves. Flowers are displayed in fuzzy, straw-colored to
coppery-pink spikes at the ends of the stiff stems.
- Planting and care: Fountain-grass is warm-season grass that is
adapted to a wide variety of soils and growing conditions. It thrives in
full sun, endures drought well, and flourishes in poor, gravelly soils.
Plants will go dormant during winter, resuming vigorous growth in early
summer. It is a prolific seeder and may invade adjacent-open ground.
Large clumps will die out in the center and should be divided.
- Propagation: By seed or division of large tussocks. Potted plants
are available commercially.
- Uses: Fountain-grass is an extremely attractive ornamental for rock
gardens, at pool-side, and as border plantings. It flowers through mid-
to late-summer and the coppery foliage provides fall and winter color.
This is an excellent ornamental grass for dry low-maintenance areas,
such as gravel beds, median strips, and road sides.
Indian-grass (Sorghastrum nutans)
- Description: Perennial, loosely-tufted or short creeping grasses
from underground runners (rhizomes), growing 3 to 6 feet tall. Foliage
is light or bluish green, somewhat coarse, and turns orange or purplish
after frost. The fuzzy seed heads are rusty, coppery, or bronze-colored,
with delicate bristles.
- Planting and care: Indian-grass is a warm-season grass native to the
Great Plains. It thrives in full sun in a variety of soils, but prefers
moist, well-drained sites. Plants reseed themselves readily.
- Propagation: By seed, root stocks, or division of large clumps, Seed
is readily available commercially.
- Uses: Indian-grass is useful in mixed stands, in native plant
gardens and naturalized areas bordering the garden or yard. Dense stands
make attractive screens and hedges.
Little Bluestem (Schizachyrium scoparium)
- Description: Perennial bunchgrass 2 to 4 feet tall. Foliage is pale
green, turning various shades of red in the fall. Flowers are arranged
in silky-hairy branches scattered among the foliage.
- Planting and care: Little bluestem is a drought tolerant, warm
season grass found naturally throughout nearly all of New Mexico, except
for the drier desert areas. The plants are also winter hardy and accept
a variety of soils and water conditions, but do best in full sun and
rather dry soils.
- Propagation: By seed, which is available commercially, or can be
gathered by hand, and by division of large clumps.
- Uses: Little bluestem is an attractive grass for native plant
gardens, borders and accents, and dried arrangements.
New Mexico Needle-and-thread (Stipa neomexicana)
- Description: Perennial bunchgrass I to 3 feet tall. Foliage is light
green, fine textured, and somewhat weepy. Flowers droop in loose,
bristly clusters. 'Me seeds are hard and needle-shaped, with a long
bristle covered with silvery hairs.(Seeds can imbed themselves in
hair, ears and other parts of pets so should not be planted in home
gardens where pets can get to them. ed.)
- Planting and care: New Mexico needle-and-thread will thrive in
loose, well-drained, lime soils. The plants are cool-season, but also
drought tolerant.
- Propagation: By seed or division of large clumps. Seed is not
available commercially, but can be gathered from wild populations on
plains and mesas in late spring or early summer.
- Uses: Though rarely used as an ornamental, New Mexico needle
and-thread makes an excellent addition to native plant gardens,
right-of-ways, and wild areas next to gardens, yards, and drives.
Wild Oats (Avena barbata and A. fatua var. sativa)
- Description: Annual bunchgrass 2 to 3 feet tall. Foliage is light to
medium green and drooping. The beauty of the plant derives from the
delicate, dangling flower clusters with their protruding bristles.
- Planting and care: Wild oats are cool-season grasses that will do
well during spring and early summer, but will die out with the summer
heat in the southern areas, persisting a bit longer in the north. Plants
are tolerant of a wide variety of soils, as long as moisture is
available.
- Propagation: By seed, available commercially or easily gathered by
hand along roadsides and fields. Sow in spring in full sun.
- Uses: Wild oats are considered pests of fields and waste places, but
these common weeds add a striking contrast to other ornamentals when
planted in dense tufts scattered throughout the garden. The flower
clusters are used in dried arrangements.
Ribbon-grass (Phalaris arundinacea var. picta)
- Description: Perennial bunch grass with underground runners
(rhizomes), 3 to 6 feet tall. The ample, green foliage is banded
lengthwise with white and yellow, occasionally pinkish, stripes. Flowers
are displayed in dense, straw-colored clusters above the foliage at the
tips of the stems.
- Planting and care: Ribbon-grass is quite drought tolerant and will
thrive in variety of soils. It is a cool season grass, however, and
flourishes in moist to wet ground in full sun. The plants will spread
from the underground runners if left uncontained in moist soil. They do
well in submerged pots or tubs in a water garden.
- Propagation: By seed or root stocks.
- Uses: The striped leaves of ribbon-grass add an attractive backdrop,
hedge, or comer fill, especially in wetter sites.
Switch-grass (Panicum virgatum)
- Description: Perennial, tussock-forming grass spreading by
underground runners (rhizomes), mostly 3 to 5 feet tall, occasionally
taller. The long leaves are medium green to bronze, drooping and giving
a fountain effect. Flowers are displayed in attractive, reddish
clusters.
- Planting and care: Switch-grass prefers loamy soil, full sun, and
plenty of water. It is a warm-season grass, but is hardy except in
extremely cold areas. The underground runners invade adjacent ground in
light, sandy soils, but less so in heavier soils.
- Propagation: By seed, which is available commercially, and root
Stocks, both of which can be gathered from plains and prairie meadows.
- Uses: Switch-grass plantings make an effective backdrop, border,
screen, windbreak, or large accent. Seed heads are used occasionally in
cut flower arrangements. Switch-grass is most attractive when grown in
dense stands, and also provides wildlife cover and bird seed. There are
several varieties of this species.
Timothy (Phleum pratense)
- Description: Perennial bunchgrass 2 to 5 feet tall. Foliage is
gray-green to blue-green. Flowers are elevated above the foliage in
dense, cylindrical, pencil-like spikes 2-5 inches long.
- Planting and care: Timothy is a cool-season grass. It requires
well-drained, loamy soil, and flourishes in both sun or shade.
- Propagation: By seed, which is readily available commercially or can
be gathered by hand. Sow in fall or spring.
- Uses: Timothy is a widely used pasture grass, imported from Europe.
This species makes an attractive mix with other grasses for a wild
meadow look or for spot effects and accents in moist gardens. The flower
stalks can be used in dried arrangements.
Weeping Lovegrass (Eragrostis curvula)
- Description: Perennial, densely-tufted bunchgrass 2 to 4 feet tall.
The foliage is dark green, with fine, arching leaves. Flowers are in
olive-green clusters rising above the leaves.
- Planting and care: Weeping lovegrass is a warm-season grass that
prefers full sun in clay to sandy soils, but is adapted to a variety of
conditions. It is extremely drought tolerant. Large clumps should be cut
back in the spring.
- Propagation: By seed, which is readily obtained commercially, or
division of large plants.
- Uses: Weeping lovegrass is native to Africa and is widely used in
the Southwest for erosion control and range rehabilitation. Grown for
its symmetrical mounds with cascading foliage, it is useful in rock
gardens as a scattered accent or background plant, mid-size border or
hedge, and small screen or windbreak.
Tall Grasses (over 5 feet
tall)
Giant Reed (Arundo donax)
- Description: Perennial, cane-like grasses 8 to 25 feet tall. Plants
form dense colonies or thickets from the underground root stocks
(rhizomes), which vigorously invade adjacent ground. Stems are thick,
hollow, and bamboo-like. Plants are often mistaken for bamboos,
sugar-cane, or common reed. Leaves are corn-like to 2 feet long and 3
inches wide. Cultivar 'Versicolor' ('Variegate') is a smaller plant with
leaves striped in yellow or white. Flowers are displayed in giant,
silvery, plume-like panicles at the tips of the stems.
- Planting and care: Giant reed is a semi-tropical grass that needs
rich, well-drained, moist soil. It can be used throughout the state, but
does best in the warmer climates, and may not flower in the northern
areas. The roots must be protected with mulch in cold-winter areas.
Plants are extremely invasive, and should be located only after careful
planning as eradicating wrongly placed plantings is extremely difficult
- Propagation: By root stocks or stem cuttings,
- Uses: Giant reed can provide effective screens, fences, windbreak,
and large borders. Thickets will dominate the landscape and must be
carefully positioned in the landscape. (In other words, You may be sorry
you ever planted them.)
Pampas-grass (Cortaderia selloana)
- Description: Perennial, evergreen grasses forming giant clumps to 12
feet tall and 6 feet in diameter. Leaves are medium to bluish green,
sawtooth-edged, long and weeping. Flowers arise in massive, silky,
silvery plumes, raised above the foliage on long stalks; those of female
plants are most attractive as the plumes are larger and more feathery.
Male flowers which are usually the result of seed propagation will be
more slender and less plume like.. There are several varieties that vary in
plant size, vigor, winter hardiness, and foliage and flower color.
- Planting and care: Pampas-grass is a cool-season plant that prefers
full sun in fertile, well-drained soils, but does not do well in cold,
clay soils. It is hardy only in the plains, prairie, and desert portions
of the state, but is tolerant of drought, wind, and neglect. Plants are
fast growing and are not easy to keep small; burning periodically might
help.
- Propagation: By division of large clumps. Plants produce seed
poorly.
- Uses: Pampas-grass provides windbreaks, fences, and comer accents in
large lawn areas. The plumes are attractive in cut flower arrangements.
Spraying the plumes with hair spray or other fixative will keep them
from shattering after they have been cut. Plant carefully because the giant tussocks will dominate the landscape.
Ravenna-grass (Saccharum ravennae, syn. Erianthus
ravennae)
- Description: Perennial bunchgrass 6 to 12 feet tall. Foliage is
dense, medium green, and scattered along the stems. The leaves droop at
the tips, turning light brown, tan, or beige in the fall. Flowers are
arranged in dense, silky, silvery to reddish panicles at the tops of the
stems, giving the plant a pampas-grass effect.
- Planting and care: Ravenna-grass is a warm-season grass, preferring
full sun in well-drained, moist to wet soil. Plants are hardy throughout
the state, but die-back during winter and lack of flowering should be
expected in the colder regions.
- Propagation: By seed and division of large clumps, the latter
preferred.
- Uses: Ravenna-grass makes an excellent screen, living fence,
backdrop, or comer accent in large yards. The plumes are useful in dried
arrangements.
[ Home ] [ Up ] [ Ornamental grasses ] |