I am a lurker. I think Steve could easily do this just by plowing a shallow furrow, dropping the rhizomes in furrow and covering (Like Bill suggested). I did 70 yards with a dibble bar (thanks Stu) in no time. My soil is pretty wet so I only dug about 4 inches deep. Weed control is essential the first year. Also for Steve's project I think I would a row of spruce at 10 foot spacing for a little insurance on the outside row.Forum member Honker has a bunch of miscanthus growing in WI (Oconto county I want to say?)...he may have some pics if he's following this thread....I know you lurk from time to time Honker ;)
I owe Stu for letting me pirate his plantings from his old place before he skipped town. The cheap guys way to do a planting is to have someone give as many rhizomes as you can get, plant them for a year and the next spring separate the clumps of all the plantings. My WAG on a one year old babied planting would be 20-30 rhizomes each.That is a pretty impressive screen for how narrow it is. How much cost did you have into this 70yd stretch?
I generally like the idea of trading or low cost sourcing to start plants but I do worry about invasiveness. I'd hate to start propagating something I thought was a sterile hybrid only to find out it isn't. Can anyone suggest a trusted source of rhizomes for sterile micanthus? I'd rather pay a little more and start small with the right stuff than unknowingly create a seed bed waiting to explode.
Any ideas how last falls planted nodes will survive the winter with the little snowfall we have. I'm worried those nodes won't survive, not having any roots and all.
I'm also wondering what the roots do if the winter killed them. I'm guessing they get all mushy. I'm digging up the plants I started in my garden last spring. I'm sure I'll be able to tell if they are alive or not once the ground thaws?