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Enter the approximate length and width of the area you will be planting and click 'Calculate' to determine how many Scirpus cyperinus you will need.

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Correct and successful spacing is complex and depends on project conditions. We encourage you to call us at 877-ECO-PLUG for project specific recommendations and further assistance.

Scirpus cyperinus

wool grass

  • Category: Grass, Native
  • Hardiness Zone: 3-9
  • Height: 4-6 Feet
  • Spread: 3-5 Feet
  • Spacing: 18-24 Inches
  • Bloom Color: Yellow
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A large, upright marsh grass with attractive wooly inflorescences that turn coppery in late summer and persist into winter.

Exposure
Full Sun
Part Sun
Soil Moisture Needs
Moist
Wet
Green Infrastructure
Bioretention/Rain Garden
Meadow/Prairie
Wetland Indicator Status
Falcutative Wetland (FACW)
Plug Type
Landscape Plug™
Attributes
Native to North America
Cut Flower
Season of Interest (Flowering)
Summer
Propagation Type
Open pollinated
Grass Type
Cool Season
Additional Information about Scirpus cyperinus

Scirpus cyperinus is a large, upright marsh grass with attractive wooly inflorescences that turn coppery in late summer and persist into winter. Growing 4-6’ tall and 2’ wide, this grass-like emergent has basal tussocks with arching blades that slowly spread by rhizome. Scirpus spp. are one of the first plants to colonize wetland areas and provide essential erosion control as they tolerate buffets of wind and waves which allows for other species that need quieter waters to establish.

S. cyperinus can be found in sedges, swamps, ditches and moist meadows, preferring moist to wet, peaty, sandy soils in full sun. It grows throughout North America with high population concentrations from southeastern Canada through New England to North Carolina and west to Oklahoma and Iowa. When placed in a happy location, wool grass will self-seed and spread by rhizomes.

Scirpus spp. are an essential plant for wetland life. Seeds provide food for birds, emergent foliage provides habitat and forage, and roots provide food for wetland mammals. It is a larval host for the Dion Skipper. It is best used in naturalized areas, and next to ponds or streambeds where it can take shallow waters and periods of inundation. Unusual seedheads are plume-like and excellent material for drying and cut flowers.

BONAP Map

Growing & Maintenance Tips for Scirpus cyperinus

Prefers moist to wet, peaty, sandy soils in full sun. Self seeds. Propagate by seed or division in spring. Best used in naturalized areas, and next to ponds or streambeds.