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KatyE 19-06-2012 08:33 AM

Ornamental grass advice!
 
Hello,

My new calamagrostis plants have been damaged by the high winds - most of the leaves are bent and the plants are looking very sorry for themselves. If I cut them down to the ground will they re-grow at this time of year?

Thanks!

Pat Kiewicz[_2_] 19-06-2012 12:48 PM

Ornamental grass advice!
 
KatyE said:

My new calamagrostis plants have been damaged by the high winds - most
of the leaves are bent and the plants are looking very sorry for
themselves. If I cut them down to the ground will they re-grow at this
time of year?

Possibly.

But you have forever tarnished Aesop's fable of the Oak and the Reeds:

A very large Oak was uprooted by the wind and thrown across a stream. It
fell among some Reeds, which it thus addressed: "I wonder how you, who
are so light and weak, are not entirely crushed by these strong winds." They
replied, "You fight and contend with the wind, and consequently you are
destroyed; while we on the contrary bend before the least breath of air, and
therefore remain unbroken, and escape."

Stoop to conquer.

--
Pat in Plymouth MI

"Yes, swooping is bad."

email valid but not regularly monitored



Kay Lancaster 19-06-2012 10:42 PM

Ornamental grass advice!
 
On Tue, 19 Jun 2012 07:33:37 +0000, KatyE wrote:

Hello,

My new calamagrostis plants have been damaged by the high winds - most
of the leaves are bent and the plants are looking very sorry for
themselves. If I cut them down to the ground will they re-grow at this
time of year?


Because they're newly planted, I'd leave them alone this year. If you have
to do the neat and tidy garden thing, put some bamboo stakes around and make
a little cage with string to get the leaves off the ground.

Right now, they need all the photosynthetic area they can get.

There have been some studies with perennial plants... leaving old "dead" leaves
on the plant is actually beneficial for many species -- they serve as a
nutrient reservoir for the plant, even though they look "bad". The usual
garden cleanup may actually be detrimental.

Kay



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