Deschampsia cespitosa has a clumping habit and fine-textured, deep-green, evergreen to semi-evergreen foliage. When mature, each mound is almost perfectly round, and 16” to 2’ tall and wide. In summer, stems will rise up to 20” above the foliage and bear delicate panicles of flowers ranging in color from green to purple and gold. Ripe seeds are tan in color, and their display remains attractive well into winter. As a bonus, this grass can be considered semi-evergreen, only requiring an optional haircut in early spring, and truly provides four seasons of interest.
Tufted hairgrass is a riparian species, and one of few native ornamental grasses that is at its best in part-sun to part-shade, and consistently moist to occasionally wet soil. Its habitat includes water margins, damp prairies, and moist open woods. This not a drought tolerant grass. Dry and hot conditions will considerably shorten its growing season and its viability, and it can struggle with the heat and high nighttime temperatures of the Southeast. It is slow-growing, long-lived, and non-aggressive. A good choice for a transitional border, or mixed in with flowering perennials that care more about soil moisture than they do about light levels. The blooming period occurs mid-summer. This is a cool-season grass, and is about as cold hardy as a grass can be: Zones 2-7
Space plants 12"-18" on center.
Deschampsia cespitosa combines well with other medium to large, transitional plants that are adapted to part-sun and/or part-shade, and moist to wet soils: Eupatorium perfoliatum (common boneset), Aruncus dioicus (bride's feathers, goat's beard), Eutrochium dubium (coastal plain Joe-Pye weed) or Eutrochium purpureum (sweetscented Joe-Pye weed). For low-growing companions, there's a long list, and here are a few: Packera spp. (ragworts), Eurybia macrophylla (bigleaf aster), Geranium maculatum (spotted geranium), Gillenia stipulata (American ipecac), Mitella diphylla (two-leaf miterwort), Polemonium reptans (Jacob's ladder), Silene stellata (starry campion), Thalictrum dioicum (early meadow-rue), and Zizia aurea (golden zizia).
Deschampsia cespitosa is black walnut tolerant. Although not a food of choice, rabbits and deer might nibble on the plants early in the growing season before their preferred menu becomes available. Tufted hairgrass occurs throughout the Northern Hemisphere and is widely used in European landscapes. The genus name honors the French surgeon and naturalist, Louis Auguste Deschamps (1765-1842).
Recorded County Distribution: USDA data.
CT, IL, IN, KY, MA, MD, ME, MI, MN, NC, ND, NH, NJ, NY, OH, PA, RI, SD, VA, VT, WI, WV, AZ, CA, CO, ID, MT, NM, NV, OR, UT, WA, WY |
Endangered | MD |
Rare | IN |
Special Concern | CT |
Arid West | FACW |
Atlantic and Gulf Coastal Plain | FACW |
Eastern Mountains and Piedmont | FACW |
Great Plains | FACW |
Midwest | FACW |
Northcentral and Northeast | FACW |
Western Mountains, Valleys, and Coast | FACW |
MAP OF WETLAND DELINEATION REGIONS
Code |
Status |
Designation |
Comment |
OBL |
Obligate Wetland |
Hydrophyte |
Almost always occur in wetlands |
FACW |
Facultative Wetland |
Hydrophyte |
Usually occur in wetlands, but may occur in non-wetlands |
FAC |
Facultative |
Hydrophyte |
Occur in wetlands and non-wetlands |
FACU |
Facultative Upland |
Nonhydrophyte |
Usually occur in non-wetlands, but may occur in wetlands |
UPL |
Obligate Upland |
Nonhydrophyte |
Almost never occur in wetlands |
Kingdom | Plantae | Plants |
Subkingdom | Tracheobionta | Vascular plants |
Superdivision | Spermatophyta | Seed plants |
Division | Magnoliophyta | Flowering plants |
Class | Liliopsida | Monocotyledons |
Subclass | Commelinidae | |
Order | Cyperales | |
Family | Poaceae | Grass family |
Genus | Deschampsia | hairgrass |
Species | Deschampsia cespitosa | tufted hairgrass |
tussock grass
Aira caespitosa
Deschampsia bottnica
Deschampsia caespitosa
Deschampsia glauca
Deschampsia mackenzieana
Deschampsia obensis
Deschampsia paramushirensis
Deschampsia pumila
Deschampsia sukatschewii
Sizes info
Shipping is free on all plants orders!
Your plants will ship using each grower’s preferred method: FedEx Ground, UPS Ground, or Spee-Dee Ground (in select midwestern states). Our growers ship orders Monday through Wednesday. The farther your plants need to travel, the earlier in the week they will ship. The goal is to have all plants delivered by the end of the week.
Shipping plugs:
Plugs are shipped in full flats, sometimes also referred to as trays. Multiple flats can be shipped in a single box. The flats are wrapped in netting or craft paper to secure the plants, and spacers are used between flats to keep the plants from being crushed.
When you unpack your plugs, the plants will have been somewhat flattened by the netting or craft paper. They will straighten out within a couple of days. You may also gently “fluff” them a bit to speed up the process. In some cases, your plants might have been cut back before packing, if the grower deemed them to have become too tall for safe packaging. Don’t worry, though, these guys know what they’re doing and would not compromise the health of the plants. They’ll fill back in in no time.
After receiving your plants’ journey in a dark box, it will be important to acclimate them to sunlight again. Over a couple of days, you should gradually move them into their preferred light exposure, and water them as per their requirement.
Although we always recommend putting your plants in the ground as soon as possible, they can stay healthy in the flats for a considerable amount of time. The key is to respect their growing requirements: if the species requires full sun, do not store them in the shade. If it is best adapted to dry soil, do not over-water.
Planting plugs:
We consider plugs ready to ship when the plants’ roots have filled the entire liner cell and the plants can easily be pulled out. In some cases you will have to go about it gently, wiggling the plant by the crown, and possibly squeezing the bottom of the liner to compress the growing medium and release the roots. Other times, the plants will appear to be root bound. They are not in the traditional sense. The plants are healthy but they have used up all the growing medium available to them. Plugs are at an aggressive stage of growth. As soon as planted the roots will immediately expand into your native soil. They establish faster than plants in larger containers, because they don’t have the luxury of a lot of growing media that can inhibit the roots from venturing outside of their comfort zone.
We are not going to address area preparation because the process can be complex and is always site-specific. However, as a rule, we recommend disturbing the soil as little as possible, and we do not recommend amending the soil. If you chose the right plant for the right conditions they will thrive. Any disturbance and amendments will only encourage weeds to emerge that never had a chance to do so before.
Installing plugs cannot be easier: dig a hole large enough for the roots to fit snugly inside, then water them in to eliminate air gaps. We recommend using a soil knife, sometimes referred to as hori hori, or a drill-adapted auger if it’s a large installation. If you use an auger, you will need a powerful drill. Depending on the size of the project and the type of soil, the process can be beyond what an average drill will bear. Mulching is recommended after installation to help keep weeds down while the plants establish. Be sure to keep it away from the crown of the plants. For large projects, you may want to mulch the area before planting, rather than tiptoeing through it after the fact. As a side note: if you are installing plugs in the fall, you might want to plant them so that the crown is about ¾” lower than the surrounding soil. The winter’s freeze/thaw cycles can push plugs out if the roots did not have enough time to establish and anchor them in.