I picked up 600 rhizomes and 100 rhizome clusters today, managed to get 60 rhizomes clusters planted almost like planting seedlings.
I should have a good comparison between the two, I planted the clusters on the outside row and I am going to plant the rhizomes on the inside row.I’ll be curious to see if you like the cluster vs. small rhizome as time goes on. Planting a rhizome seems easier but if the cluster gets you there faster? I cut and planted my own clusters last spring and they didn’t perform much better than a rhizome. BUT it was a drought year so I’m making any judgement based on that experiment.
Mine planted for road screen are in year 2
Personal experience suggests they are hard to "over water" and thrive near pond/creek banks
bill
Mine planted for road screen are in year 2
Personal experience suggests they are hard to "over water" and thrive near pond/creek banks
bill
Out of curiosity has anyone planted screens of MG within a CRP contract (with the approval of the NRCS)? I’ve got a mile of road screen I am planning to do but only 3 years left on the CRP contract and haven’t broached the conversation with them. If I re enroll (should funds be available) I can hold out enough to do the screen. It only amounts to about 2-3 acres when doing the math. Just curious if anyone else has had that discussion. I assume it’s a no since it’s not a native plant.
Haha. Exactly. Nothing a little semantics can’t get fixed. Or it could show up? “No sir I don’t know where them big weeds in a row came from” I doubt it. I wouldn’t tell them it’s not native. Try it’s an experiment to see if a biofuel grass will grow. Or maybe you want to shade out your fence rows so the trees can’t grow up in them
Out of curiosity has anyone planted screens of MG within a CRP contract (with the approval of the NRCS)? I’ve got a mile of road screen I am planning to do but only 3 years left on the CRP contract and haven’t broached the conversation with them. If I re enroll (should funds be available) I can hold out enough to do the screen. It only amounts to about 2-3 acres when doing the math. Just curious if anyone else has had that discussion. I assume it’s a no since it’s not a native plant.
I would think most people looking at it would think it is phragmites when seeing it, with only three years left on the contract it probably wont even head up by then.
My experience with cuttings was positive last year, but the only miscanthus that re-emerged this year was from rhizomes- none of last year’s cuttings, which made it to 10-15” in 2018, came back. I’m blaming the polar vortex. My rhizome started plants were very slow to come back, which I based on the wet, cool spring. I also had trouble eliminating the competition this spring , as I hardly had a dry day to spray during the dormant period.
Couple relevant methods to propagate, thought they were interesting:
https://www.teagasc.ie/media/websit...ts_of_Miscanthus_giganteus_J_Finnan_CELUP.pdf
https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1111/gcbb.12480