Cutting Back Miscanthus in the Spring

Among many garden chores that come in spring perhaps the biggest is the trimming of the ornamental grasses. Trimming back perennials can be time consuming but the ornamental grasses can be a bear. It's not the tiny little hair-like strands of the Nassella tenuissima (Ponytail grass), or the tall and narrow 'Karl Foerster' Feather Reed Grasses. The panicums aren't a problem either, both 'Northwind' and 'Shenandoah' switchgrasses are relatively tame. The muhly grass is very cooperative. It's the miscanthus. I know someone is probably thinking "Dave shouldn't plant that, it's invasive" and you would be right, it is and I shouldn't, and I won't - at least not anymore. I'm switching to the panicums as a replacement for miscanthus but I still have to tend the miscanthus I have even if I never add another one to the landscape.


Pruning an Ornamental Grass

Trimming back an ornamental grass is fairly straight forward. For miscanthus I  trim down to 6 inches or so high and take small handfuls of grass at a time then prune them with my hand clippers. For other grasses I make sure to stay 4-6 inches above the crown of the plant. I kind of use the top of the green growth as a guideline. As far as tools go I use the low-tech hand clipper option, but I don't recommend it! It wears out your arm very fast and the clipper blades even faster. A good pair of electric trimmers will make "short" work of your grasses but a pair of sharp pruners will do a good job too. I also recommend using good thick gloves or you risk a painful death by a thousand paper cuts. It's not really paper, and you won't really die, but paper cuts are one of the most annoying injuries you can receive and these grasses have very sharp edges.

Have you pruned back your grasses yet?



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