How to Grow Ornamental Grasses
by Michael J.
McGroarty
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Ornamental
grasses have become extremely popular in the past ten years or
so, and if you buy them at a garden center they are kind of
pricey. Learning how to grow them yourself is actually quite
easy. They can be grown from seed, but I won’t pretend to be
an expert at that for several reasons. One, I don’t know
anything about growing them from seed, and two, I have no desire
to propagate them from seed because seedlings require too much
care.
The easiest and
most effective way to propagate them is through simple division.
Of course you will need at least one parent plant of each
variety that you would like to grow. If you shop around you
might be able to find some 4” inch pots at a fair price.
One of each
variety is good for a start. I find that the best time of the
year to divide them is in the spring, just before the new growth
emerges. If you buy the stock plants in the early spring, you
might be able to divide them right away. If you buy them at any
other time of the year, just plant them in your garden or other
suitable location, knowing that you are going to dig them up in
a few months, or a year or so.
When spring
arrives you can divide them at any time as long as they are not
well into putting on new growth. The earlier the better. To
divide them simply dig up the root mass and start dividing it
into pieces. The divisions do not have to be to be very large.
It’ difficult to describe, but as long as you have some roots,
the new plant is likely to grow.
If you have
small young plants you can probably just tear the root mass
apart with your hands, but if the root mass is very big then you
are going to need some tools. You might need some heavy duty
tools!
Last spring I
divided several grass plants that had been in my landscape for a
few years. When I dug out the root mass it was much larger and
more dense than I expected. Using a very good digging spade and
some real elbow power I was able to chop the root mass into
quarters, and I replanted the quarters back into my landscape.
That still left many clumps that I wanted to divide into very
small plants that I could pot up in 2 quart containers.
The root mass
was too dense to tear apart with my hands, so I literally got a
hammer and a 4” wide mason’s chisel and chiseled off pieces.
It worked and I now have a couple of hundred beautiful little
grass plants in 2 quart containers.
Since then I
have talked with a friend of mine who works for a large
wholesale grower, and he told me that you never want to let an
ornamental grass plant get that big if you intend to divide it.
He said they plant small divisions in the field in the spring,
and dig them up the following spring and divide them again. He
assured me that if you get them just 12 months later, they can
be easily torn apart by hand.
That sounds like
a lot more fun than what I went through!
Michael J.
McGroarty is the author of this article. Visit his most
interesting website, http://www.freeplants.com
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