Miscanthus sinensis 'Little Zebra' 24w35 3yo
Miscanthus sinensis 'Little Zebra' 24w35 3yo Miscan F2 (Thomas Walsh, Nunica, MI) Dwarf Maiden Grass Miscan, 4x4ft@ Maturity, horizontally-banded foliage and wine-purple flower plumes, Hardy to Zone 5, Garden F2 (SRC Lowes) PLTD 2021.
Missouri Botanical Garden: ‘Little Zebra’, sometimes commonly called dwarf zebra grass, is a compact cultivar that typically grows in a clump to 3-4’ tall and to 2-3’ wide. It is noted for its compact size, upright form, horizontally-banded foliage and wine-purple flower plumes. Leaf blades feature, at irregular intervals, distinctive horizontal yellow bands (to 1” in height) that retain good coloration throughout the growing season. Flowers appear in corymbose panicles of 10-13 racemes (each to 6” long) above the foliage in late summer. Tiny flowers emerge gray-purple with the plumes having an overall wine-purple coloration. As seeds begin to form, the flower/seed plumes fade to creamy tan, often providing some winter interest. Foliage fades to tan after frost. U.S. Plant Patent PP13,008 issued September 24, 2002.
Peony croaked in this spot. 2022 note: fast grower.
Photo by F.D.Richards, Washtenaw County, Michigan. Creative Commons Copyright CC BY-SA 4.0.
Link to additional photos of this plant on my Flickr account from 2021, 22, 24:
Miscanthus sinensis 'Little Zebra' 24w35 3yo
Miscanthus sinensis 'Little Zebra' 24w35 3yo Miscan F2 (Thomas Walsh, Nunica, MI) Dwarf Maiden Grass Miscan, 4x4ft@ Maturity, horizontally-banded foliage and wine-purple flower plumes, Hardy to Zone 5, Garden F2 (SRC Lowes) PLTD 2021.
Missouri Botanical Garden: ‘Little Zebra’, sometimes commonly called dwarf zebra grass, is a compact cultivar that typically grows in a clump to 3-4’ tall and to 2-3’ wide. It is noted for its compact size, upright form, horizontally-banded foliage and wine-purple flower plumes. Leaf blades feature, at irregular intervals, distinctive horizontal yellow bands (to 1” in height) that retain good coloration throughout the growing season. Flowers appear in corymbose panicles of 10-13 racemes (each to 6” long) above the foliage in late summer. Tiny flowers emerge gray-purple with the plumes having an overall wine-purple coloration. As seeds begin to form, the flower/seed plumes fade to creamy tan, often providing some winter interest. Foliage fades to tan after frost. U.S. Plant Patent PP13,008 issued September 24, 2002.
Peony croaked in this spot. 2022 note: fast grower.
Photo by F.D.Richards, Washtenaw County, Michigan. Creative Commons Copyright CC BY-SA 4.0.
Link to additional photos of this plant on my Flickr account from 2021, 22, 24: