By
Norman Winter Muhly
grass stole the show at the annual Fall Field Day at the
Truck Crops Experiment Station in Crystal Springs. Honestly,
I think I could have sold several hundred containers of this
beautiful ornamental grass. Since
the field day, I have continued to receive calls about the
beautiful ornamental grass with the cotton candy-like blooms
that were a deep rose color. Muhly
grass impressed my horticultural counterparts as well. The
name comes from Muhlenbergia. All the
muhly grass questions drove me to my first reference choice,
The New Royal Horticultural Society Dictionary of Gardening.
Four volumes of 800 pages each, and with a huge price tag,
but no hint of muhly. Not even a clue that maybe the name
had been changed. Next, I
consulted Hortus Third, with its 1,289 pages of tiny print.
Nothing. Nada. No glimpse into what Muhlenbergia might
really be. When we
run into these obstacles, there is a tendency to think that
some taxonomist extremist group has changed the name and
then the paper trail disappears. So I went to my oldest
reference the Manual of Cultivated Plants by Liberty Hyde
Bailey, and I met with the same answer. Not here. Until
someone sheds more light on this, here is the skinny. The
name is Muhlenbergia capillaris, and it is native to
Mississippi, the southeast and Mexico. The family formerly
known as Poaceae is now Gramineae, or grass family, which is
believed to have 635 genera and 9,000 species. Muhlenbergia
has not received much print, hence it is little
known. It is a
gorgeous clumping grass produced in Mississippi. Muhly will
likely be much sought after and is hardy throughout our
state. Plant in
the perennial border or as an entry accent from 1-gallon
containers. We cut ours back in February to get a renewal of
fresh green growth. The flowers were about 2.5 to 3 feet
tall and as wide. Even when not in bloom, the clumping,
bamboo-looking foliage has a place in the garden. You may
have to ask your nursery for a special order. Other
grasses that caught the eyes of the thousands of visitors to
this year's event was the maiden grass, Miscanthus sinensis,
which is native to Eastern Asia. It was amazing to see how
it matured in just its second year. Our selection grew to
about six feet and had gorgeous flowers. Zebra
grass is another form of maiden grass that everyone needs to
use in the border. We do not have it at our experiment
station yet, but we will. This is another clumping grass
that has creamy yellow bands across the width of the leaves.
The foliage is great in arrangements as are the
flowers. Pampas
grass has always been one you either love or hate. The dwarf
Pampas grass at the field day was opening up eyes with its
shorter foliage but plumes every bit as gorgeous as its
fuller- size relative. Many
other grasses are just as great, like the fountain grasses
and lemon grass. Ornamental grasses can turn a mundane
perennial border or landscape into a work of art. I tell
gardeners almost weekly that if they plant ornamental grass,
stick a zinnia or black-eyed Susan next to it. Their
neighbors will think they went to landscape design school
during the winter and come asking for
suggestions. Released:
Oct. 30, 1997 Editor's Note: Ideal publication dates of Southern Gardening columns are within one month of their release. Editors should examine older columns carefully for any information that could be time sensitive.
Southern
Gardening
Muhly Grass
Steals Field Day Attention
Horticulturist
Central Mississippi Research & Extension
Center
Contact: Norman Winter, (601) 857-2284
Visit: DAFVM
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