Yes, more ornamental grass talk. Deal with it.
Today’s topic my fellow grassophiles is Feather Reed Grass ‘El Dorado’:
- 4-5 feet tall and about 2 feet wide
- Survives zones 4-8
- Works in full to partial sun
- A gold variegated color
- A cool season grass – puts on most of its growth in the early spring before temps reach about 75 degrees.
- Starts to bloom in early summer when blooms emerge pinkish and eventually mature to a wheat like color
- Deer resistant like most ornamental grasses
Within weeks, ‘El Dorado’ is starting to take shape:
While I would never call them focal points or stand-outs, I do enjoy the vertical aspect they bring to the garden and they are reliable as hell, and that point cannot be forgotten. Especially in my nasty old poor draining, deer infested, wet clay.
They do tend to flop a bit more in partial shade as seen in the photo below:
And are much more upright in full sun:
One final thing. While most websites indicate this grass gets to be between 4 and 5 feet tall, mine max out at about 2 and a half to 3 feet. We’ll see if that changes as they become more established.
I would love to hear your thoughts on this grass. Success? Failures? Somewhere in between?
John
Mine fell open as yours did. It did bloom this year, last year it didn’t. It wasn’t the prettiest grass that I have grown. I did not ditch it, but it was moved to a sunnier area. I think we have such hot humid summers that it isn’t as happy as it could be.
Mine was less than spectacular this year…
I agree about the drought…’cause it looked promising early on..
My all-time favorite, is still the Miscanthus series of grasses…
Sure-fire winners…
Cheers!
Linda :o)
Thanks John very interesting as always
cheers
Ian
I had 2 Calamogrotis Karl Foerster clumps flanking my front steps. Awful floppy mess this summer with our plentiful rain. I only have 5 hours of sun there so that contributed to being floppy too. I love the idea of an upright grass there contrasting with my 2 hardy box so I replaced them with Panicum ‘Northwind’. Rumored to endure hurricane winds. Wish my luck on my new selections.