GROW A BUNCH OF NATIVE GRASSES & SEDGES!

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  • Опубликовано: 30 мар 2021
  • Native clumping grasses bring beauty, wildlife habitat, and floodwater control to sun and shade gardens. Sedges are perfect for shady spots where they can mimic the look of lawn. Explore options from tall to small with John Hart Asher of the Ecosystem Design Group. Find out when and how to plant from seed or transplants and how to prune in late winter.
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Комментарии • 25

  • @ErikMills-kv1ux
    @ErikMills-kv1ux Месяц назад +1

    Linda, you are a truly wonderful communicator, writer and narrator, I must say… especially on your gardens-on-tour videos, where your descriptions (and soothing voice!) truly capture the "essence" of each property! From certain unique plants or planting schemes, yard art pieces, and any construction. sustainability or accessibility projects the gardeners have undertaken, and more. Your words show your passion when compared to some other gardeners in the media. Thank you for CTG.

  • @jasmine50fifty
    @jasmine50fifty 3 года назад +10

    YESS GRASSES!!!! Native Grasses are my obsession! I want to get nerdy!!I cant just get enough 🌾🎋❤️
    Give John Hart Asher his own series to educate the masses on grasses!

    • @CentralTexasGardener
      @CentralTexasGardener  3 года назад

      Thank you! Yes, we'll certainly be doing more with John Hart! So glad to have you on the CTG team.

  • @StephenFordQuestionMark
    @StephenFordQuestionMark 3 года назад +6

    Glad to see some grass content! Many thanks.

  • @Doctor_Subtilis
    @Doctor_Subtilis 2 года назад +3

    The thing i love most about our native grasses and sedges is how they are so ubiquitous but also incredibly obscure even to many botany enthusiasts. And the paucity of information and subtleties of the lesser known species makes for quite the exercise when it comes to identifying them. I learned so much identifying saccharum alopecuroides. And how easy they are to propagate from seed and division and how quickly they can change a landscape really makes them a joy to cultivate and indispensable. I don't get how some people are bored by them.

  • @larrywagoner3984
    @larrywagoner3984 3 года назад +6

    WoW guys, I have a new wrinkle in my brain :),,and that is I've learned more about("GRASSES") than I ever thought was out there to learn. thank you so much for the grasses/sedges insight message guys :-)
    God bless and stay safe y'all
    'Larry from TX & AZ'

  • @vickiesorenson2385
    @vickiesorenson2385 Год назад

    I enjoy your lingo on the grasses. Lots of dry humor here! Lol🎉

  • @tazmankb26
    @tazmankb26 3 года назад +3

    I love ornamentals- I have Muhly, Asian Spear, Porcupine, Pampas, and Purple Fountain grass. I made the mistake and planted the flowing Mexican Heather and it is super invasive. I have little tuffs of it popping up all over my garden.

    • @jdy1054
      @jdy1054 Год назад

      Pampas grass is horribly invasive in SW Ohio. Think about using only natives, which feed lots of insects and pollinators, and don’t destroy the environment. I had Chinese fountain grass, but I tore it out after I saw it popping up in the empty lot across the street. My landscape was ruining the environment. But I loved how it looked- it was hard to tear it out. Lol. It’s hard to not find delight in some beautiful non native grasses or plants, but their damage far outweighs their beauty to the eye.

    • @ErikMills-kv1ux
      @ErikMills-kv1ux Месяц назад

      Like many people, I do particularly like the way _Stipa tenuissima_ (Mexican feathergrass) LOOKS, visually, and how it flows in the breeze like water, but of course it’s naturally quite vigorous. I’ve found it’s important to prune it before too many of the hair-like seeds fly around on the wind. Yes, the clump just gets stimulated and grows back twice as strongly, but it’s really one of the easiest grasses to manage, considering how vigorous it is… if the sprouts appear somewhere on the property, they’re easily removed. And it’s not even like there are THAT many either. In my yard at least. I have one clump of it and it’s the mother of all the sprouts I find.
      Still, I think every plant has its purpose, in nature and in the yard. Every plant is an insect haven, for starters. But feathergrass is quite useful if you need something fast. In my family’s front yard, there are some very nicely landscaped areas, but they’ve lived here since 1986, and there are still areas of bare dirt exposed, which causes a fine layer of dust on the house and plants. So I used Mexican feathergrass as a quickly spreading groundcover, to fill in the bare dirt spots. Anywhere I don’t like it, we take it out. But it does have a nice appeal, like a whole yard filled with it. It’s also not a bully. It grows and knits together with many other plants, I’ve found. The front yard is fairly “formal” and colonial looking, and mainly shaded north facing. _Stipa_ doesn’t care where it grows, as we know… the yard is framed by a giant Lebanese cedar, a jacaranda and a Banyan fig. All of which create good shade. Underneath is decomposed granite and stepping stones. The front of the porch has box hedges on either side, with some random daylilies, _Alstroemeria_ and variegated English Ivy mixed in between. There’s also a massive 30-year old split-leaf philodendron, AKA _Thaumatophyllum bipinnatifidum_ The feathergrass fills in well and helps control the dust being blown.

  • @jdy1054
    @jdy1054 Год назад +1

    Sedges have edges,
    Rushes are round,
    Grasses are hollow right down to the ground.
    Yes, I have heard that!

  • @kathiethompson6719
    @kathiethompson6719 11 месяцев назад

    Fantastic information! I was wondering what grasses I could use for my western-facing yard.

  • @duxdawg
    @duxdawg 2 месяца назад

    "Sedges have edges, Rushes are round, Grasses have nodes."

  • @chrisstanford3652
    @chrisstanford3652 2 месяца назад

    🌾🤗

  • @jhonPriego-dp5fd
    @jhonPriego-dp5fd 3 месяца назад

    Nurseries are like flea markets just 5 around here been too many weeks looks weekly

  • @tabithasherie3279
    @tabithasherie3279 Год назад +1

    I love our prairie grasses. I'm slowly replacing my urban lawn. Where can I find Muhlenbergia lindheimeri, Muhlenbergia rigens, Muhlenbergia dubia in seed form? I can not seem to find any Texas sellers other than Jelitto growers in Europe. I tried growing mature seeds I gathered from a public planted lindheimeri plant, failed every attempt, any suggestions would be appreciated (I read no stratification needed). Prairie drop seed is another tough one to germinate, but I'm trying a dry stratification process at the moment. Since I have a large area to cover seed starting is the most economical way for me to go; easiest native grasses to grow from seed so far: Muhlenbergia capillaris, Bouteloua curtipendula, Koeleria macrantha, and Schizachyrium scoparium.

    • @jdy1054
      @jdy1054 Год назад +1

      I cold stratified my prairie drop seed for 30 days, then planted it in a tray I put in a plastic bag to keep it damp. I’m in Ohio, and I ordered my seed from Prairie Moon Nursery in Minnesota. Maybe the genetics are different in Texas varieties . But this works for me.I keep them at about 60 degrees but I put out in the sun in those enclosed bags. Hope this might work for you. I always have trouble getting little bluestem to sprout! I’m getting to where I enjoy the challenges. Lol. Good luck!

  • @darlenesawyer6739
    @darlenesawyer6739 3 года назад

    My soil is gray ash and sand, I hope the grasses will grow.

  • @nahword5604
    @nahword5604 Год назад +1

    Are most of these long root grasses and sedges problematic for pipes and wires?

    • @motoosoteo6219
      @motoosoteo6219 Год назад +2

      I've never seen grasses cause problems with pipes. The grass roots are thin and don't grow massive like tree roots which put pressure on pipes that can then cause problems.

    • @jdy1054
      @jdy1054 Год назад

      I’ve been told that if you have a septic system and a leach field you might want to try grasses or forbs with shorter root systems. But I’ve never heard of grass roots being the problem for pipes or wires. Up here in Ohio it’s always maple, River birch or willow that get into pipes and cause problems, not grass roots. But most people don’t grow prairie grasses, so I can’t say for sure.

  • @joansmith3492
    @joansmith3492 11 месяцев назад +1

    you didn't let him answer the "chia head' question. bummer. speargrass can kill your dog according to my old dog trainer. somehow the spear seed gets into the dogs lungs and causes a lethal infection.

  • @jhonPriego-dp5fd
    @jhonPriego-dp5fd 3 месяца назад

    Economy not ecology even little green house produce bunches and looks weekly