Grasses as Container Plants

Perched on a sinuous stone wall at Cheekwood Botanical Garden & Museum of Art in Nashville, the Terazo Planter by Frontgate shows just how well suited grasses are for containers. The ‘Cabaret’ miscanthus centerpiece is encircled by Chamaecyparis pisifera ‘Golden Mop’, Euphorbia ‘Diamond Frost’, Festuca glauca ‘Elijah Blue’, Stachys byzantina ‘Big Ears’, Lonicera nitida Edmee Gold™ and Miscanthus sinensis ‘Gold Bar’.

Grasses as Container Plants 
Cheekwood Botanical Garden and Museum of Art
Nashville, TN

Photo by: Jon Whittle

A single, graceful bamboo muhly grass (Muhlenbergia dumosa) in an oversize container makes a dramatic solo performance in an amphitheaterlike part of Cheekwood’s Herb Study Garden. Here the earthy color and simple shape of the concrete Mars Pot by Vestrivas is reminiscent of ancient oil jars, making it a fitting addition to the Mediterranean atmosphere inspired by billowing rosemary and a weathered column remnant, originally part of Nashville’s State Capitol building.

Grasses as Container Plants 
Cheekwood Botanical Garden and Museum of Art
Nashville, TN

Photo by: Jon Whittle

At the entrance to Cheekwood’s Museum of Art, originally a mansion designed by noted architect and landscape architect Bryant Fleming, a classical statue seems to be sizing up a lively mix of tall, mop-topped papyrus, sedges and a basketgrass (Oplismenus hirtellus) trailing over the edge of a bean pot by Gladding, McBean. Sedges can bring a range of textures, heights and unusual colors to container plantings. Here Carex buchananii ‘Red Rooster’ is a vertical spray of amber tones, C. testacea, or orange New Zealand sedge, forms a fine-textured mound of auburn and green, and C. phyllocephala ‘Sparkler’ hugs the container lip with short, wide, variegated leaves.

Grasses as Container Plants 
Cheekwood Botanical Garden and Museum of Art
Nashville, TN

Photo by: Jon Whittle

An unexpected pairing of modern silver-colored pots with the informal texture of a native grass forms a dramatic scene against a limestone wall on the back patio of the Cheekwood mansion. Panicum virgatum ‘Northwind’ is a very upright form of switchgrass, making it an ideal vertical element. Thick leaves are a steely blue color all summer, then transition to gold in the fall, making this a multiseason arrangement. Trio of zinc containers: Living Green.

Grasses as Container Plants 
Cheekwood Botanical Garden and Museum of Art
Nashville, TN

Photo by: Jon Whittle

Sticking to a limited color palette, with the main focus on varied textures and forms, can be every bit as eye-catching (even without flowers) as a container of neon annuals. Here playing with soft greens and variegation in creamy white and pale yellow was the rule. Tall, bamboolike Arundo donax var. versicolor strikes a pose in this Gladding, McBean container, courtesy of Living Green, fronted by Iris ensata ‘Variegata’. Around the edges are fountain grass (Pennisetum alopecuroides ‘Desert Plains’), sedges Carex ciliato-marginata ‘Treasure Island’
and C. albula ‘Frosty Curls’, and shrubby rosemary and Chamaecyparis obtusa ‘Snowkist’.

Grasses as Container Plants 
Cheekwood Botanical Garden and Museum of Art
Nashville, TN

Photo by: Louisa Jones

Delicate variegated river oats, Chasmanthium latifolium ‘River Mist’, a hot new plant from Itsaul Plants in Georgia, seems well suited to this Japanese Garden setting in the Small Giulia Planter by Campania. The grass even seems to mimic the surrounding canes of the bamboo grove. Suiting a container and its contents to the style of a garden will enable it to fit in seamlessly. And remember to keep scale in mind; a huge container in a small garden is a tricky arrangement, and a tiny pot in a huge border can get lost.

Grasses as Container Plants 
Cheekwood Botanical Garden and Museum of Art
Nashville, TN

Photo by: Jon Whittle

Want a little “pow”? Try a big cobalt-blue container like the Obsit Square Planter by Campania with a richly colored mix of chartreuse Hakone grass (Hakonechloa macra ‘All Gold’), Rustic Orange™ coleus, Arcelia ‘Purple’ angelonia and eggplant-colored elephant’s-ear (Colocasia esculenta ‘Black Magic’). Another big plus with grasses is movement, and here the Hakone grass and elephant’s-ear catch every breeze and seem almost alive. This is also a good mix for a shady garden.

Grasses as Container Plants 
Cheekwood Botanical Garden and Museum of Art
Nashville, TN

Photo by: Jon Whittle

Subtle color matching adds another creative layer to gardening. The dainty pinkish flowers of Panicum virgatum ‘Shenandoah’ are a perfect fit with the hand-made terra-cotta Messina Vase by Seibert & Rice. Everything about this combination says focal point — the uprightness of the grass, and the height and vertical ribbing on the pot. If your garden has a preponderance of low plants or it’s in its early stages of planning, a bold container with a tall grass can have the same presence as a shrub or a piece of sculpture, and it’s mobile so you can reposition it as the garden changes.

Grasses as Container Plants 
Cheekwood Botanical Garden and Museum of Art
Nashville, TN

Photo by: Jon Whittle

Grouping pots can amp up the visual interest as well as the plant combination possibilities. And be on the lookout for unusual containers. These two tall ones from Eye of the Day are made from a traditional material, terra cotta, but both have a very modern twist. On the left, Miscanthus sinensis ‘Morning Light’ is encircled by lotus flower, Carex ciliato-marginata ‘Treasure Island’ and some striking succulents: ‘Mr. Goodbud’ sedum, Red Tide™ echeveria and Aloe humilis ‘Hedgehog’. The pot on the right is crowned with a single Carex morrowii ‘Silver Sceptre’.

Grasses as Container Plants 
Cheekwood Botanical Garden and Museum of Art
Nashville, TN

Photo by: Jon Whittle

Some plant/container combos just exude a whimsical presence. This festive ribbed orange Olivia Planter from Campania seems to be sprouting a hairdo of Carex testacea ‘Indian Summer’, and the container sets off the sedge’s orange tones. A pot on the small side such as this one can be tucked in almost anywhere for a bit of pop, like this bright border in Cheekwood’s Robertson Ellis Color Garden.

SOURCE:http://www.gardendesign.com/pictures/grasses-as-container-plants_176/