Pink Muhly Grass (Muhlenbergia capillaris) has seduced garden designers for the last decade. Its haze of hot pink inflorescences set the late summer garden ablaze. But unlike other ornamental grasses, it is a surprisingly tricky plant to design with. Muhly Grass does not offer the same early season mass and volume that Switchgrass and Fountain Grass provide. In fact, through most of the summer, it sits low and wiry—barely substantial enough to cover the mulch. I planted a large mass of 120 plants beside a path in a southern garden I designed. The result was rather disappointing. Until August, it looked rather weedy and insubstantial. Once it bloomed, the effect was glorious.
Showing posts with label native combinations. Show all posts
Showing posts with label native combinations. Show all posts
Tuesday, June 14, 2011
Thursday, May 19, 2011
Native Combinations: 2 for the Shade
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Solidago flexicaulis (Zigzag Solidago) blooms on the side of the road in Vermont. Image by Thomas Rainer |
A shade tolerant Solidago? A few years ago, I saw a beautiful clump of Solidago flexicaulis (Zigzag Goldenrod) on the side of the road in Vermont. It was so stunning I stopped the car and pulled out the camera (my wife loves it when I do this—our vacation pictures have more plants in them than people). Initially, I could not identify the flower. The plant’s broad-leaves have sharply serrated edges. That foliage combined with the glowing-yellow racemes reminded me immediately of the ornamental perennial, Ligulara ‘The Rocket’. Was this some kind of native Ligularia I did not know?
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