Posted by Janet Tweedy on November 5, 2011, 10:18 am
Which Pampas Grass would you recommend for a garden of about an acre and
a half . The owner wants to put it at the back (luckily) of very deep
border.
The new one being pushed by garden Centres is too small but there's
Sunningdale Silver and also Rosea.
I hate the stuff but someone out there might like it enough to have an
opinion. :)
--
Janet Tweedy
Posted by Kathy on November 5, 2011, 10:23 am
> Which Pampas Grass would you recommend for a garden of about an acre and a
> half . The owner wants to put it at the back (luckily) of very deep
> border.
> The new one being pushed by garden Centres is too small but there's
> Sunningdale Silver and also Rosea.
> I hate the stuff but someone out there might like it enough to have an
> opinion. :)
Wouldn't be able to recommend one, but there was one in my garden in
Staffordshire. I used to leave the fronds on over winter, and was rewarded
each spring by watching the sparrows and finches plundering it to line their
nests. Worth having one for that reason alone, IMHO.
--
Kathy
Posted by Jake on November 5, 2011, 11:56 am
>> Which Pampas Grass would you recommend for a garden of about an acre and a
>> half . The owner wants to put it at the back (luckily) of very deep
>> border.
>>
>> The new one being pushed by garden Centres is too small but there's
>> Sunningdale Silver and also Rosea.
>> I hate the stuff but someone out there might like it enough to have an
>> opinion. :)
>Wouldn't be able to recommend one, but there was one in my garden in
>Staffordshire. I used to leave the fronds on over winter, and was rewarded
>each spring by watching the sparrows and finches plundering it to line their
>nests. Worth having one for that reason alone, IMHO.
I have a cortaderia pumilla (if I've spelt it right). This is a dwarf
variety, only growing to about 5 feet tall. It's now quite old and the
centre has rotted away together with a small bit at the back (but only
I ever see the back and you have to stand next to it to see the hole
in the middle so it doesn't matter). Like Kathy's used to, mine gets
covered in birds pulling off nesting material in the spring but, in
addition, I pile up leaves in the centre each autumn and hedgehogs can
get in through the little gap at the back and hibernate safely.
Annual care involves a swing of the hedge cutter about a foot above
ground in late spring to remove the old heads and leaves.
IMO the dwarf variety looks ok as a single specimen and you don't need
massive space to take it. The normal 12 footers really need to be
grown in groups and take up so much space it gets ridiculous.
Cheers, Jake
=======================================================
You can't change yesterday so forget it. You don't know
what tomorrow will bring so don't worry about it. Just
enjoy today. It's a gift; which is why we call it "the
present".
Posted by Janet on November 5, 2011, 1:01 pm
says...
>
>
> >> Which Pampas Grass would you recommend for a garden of about an acre and a
> >> half . The owner wants to put it at the back (luckily) of very deep
> >> border.
> >>
> >> The new one being pushed by garden Centres is too small but there's
> >> Sunningdale Silver and also Rosea.
> >> I hate the stuff but someone out there might like it enough to have an
> >> opinion. :)
> >
> >Wouldn't be able to recommend one, but there was one in my garden in
> >Staffordshire. I used to leave the fronds on over winter, and was rewarded
> >each spring by watching the sparrows and finches plundering it to line their
> >nests. Worth having one for that reason alone, IMHO.
>
> I have a cortaderia pumilla (if I've spelt it right). This is a dwarf
> variety, only growing to about 5 feet tall. #
GMTA.. I grow cortaderia richardii and find it a far better garden plant
than pampas.It flowers extravagantly and reliably, very young, but doesn't
look alien and artificial so fits well at the back of a mixed border.
In autumn, birds go mad for the seeds; the clump loks as if it's alive,
every stem swaying and bowed under the weight of dozens of small birds
feeding. When all the seeds are gone I cut off the spent flower stems
(useful as lightweight canes) leaving just the handsome dome of leaves for
winter.
The leaves while sharp are nor as razorish as pampas,and it's not a
difficult plant to control, dig out or get rid of.
http://www.plantpress.com/plant-encyclopedia/plantdb.php?plant 48
Janet
Posted by Janet Tweedy on November 5, 2011, 6:23 pm
>GMTA.. I grow cortaderia richardii
Looking it up Janet it says it's more tender than the normal one and the
plumes don't go through winter. i think the owner of the garden wanted
the plumes to add some interest at the back of the border through the
winter but I'll print out the web page and show her so thank you.
--
Janet Tweedy
Dalmatian Telegraph
http://www.lancedal.demon.co.uk
> half . The owner wants to put it at the back (luckily) of very deep
> border.
> The new one being pushed by garden Centres is too small but there's
> Sunningdale Silver and also Rosea.
> I hate the stuff but someone out there might like it enough to have an
> opinion. :)