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Old 11-01-2009, 06:06 PM posted to rec.gardens
[email protected] Persephone@NoSpam.com is offline
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Default Decorative grass privacy fence.

On Sat, 10 Jan 2009 20:14:31 -0800, "David E. Ross"
wrote:

On 1/10/2009 4:30 PM, Dan Listermann wrote:
What considerations are there to using decorative grass as a privacy fence?
We are looking at a bit of property that gets flooded annually. A normal
privacy fence would probably be damaged during the flood. I figure that a
line of this very tall dense grass, while damaged, could just grow back
every year.



I would avoid pampas grass. In many areas, it's considered an invasive
pest. No, it doesn't spread by runners the way bamboo spreads.
Instead, it scatters seed.

Other tall ornamental grasses go dormant in the winter. They need to be
cut quite low before new growth starts in the spring. This eliminates
them from use as a privacy screen.

As someone else suggested, you might try a clumping bamboo. Look up
bamboo in Sunset's Western Garden Book. For each species, it tells how
big it grows, its climate adaptability, and whether it's clumping or
running. (If you plant running bamboo, your neighbors might visit you
in the middle of the night with tar and feathers, to ride you out of
town on a rail.)


Even if it's clumping bamboo, it can be a nuisance. Mine (which I
finally paid somebody a healthy sum to remove) constantly scattered
little paperish thingies all over adjacent plantings and beyond. It
also pushed into the lemon tree. Personally, I'd avoid another
encounter with bamboo, but YMMV.

Have you thought of a wire fence with vines twisted into it? With
time, and close planting, that can become opaque to viewers. Of
course it may limit height -- are there wire fences that go over 6'?

Persephone
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