Description
Carex comans bronze form – New Zealand hair sedge
Botanical name: Carex comans (bronze form)
Common names: New Zealand hair sedge, bronze sedge
Family: Cyperaceae (sedge family)
Plant type: Evergreen sedge
Habit: Low, arching, mound-forming
Pot size: 2–3 litre pot
Eventual size: Approx. 30–40cm tall × 45cm spread
Foliage: Very fine, hair-like, arching coppery-bronze foliage forming a soft mound; evergreen
Flowers: Insignificant brownish flower spikes; grown for its foliage
Scent: Not scented
Aspect / light: Full sun to partial shade
Soil: Moist but well-drained; sharp drainage in winter; any pH
Hardiness: RHS H4 (hardy, to about −10°C); may be short-lived in cold, wet gardens; USDA zones 7–9
Exposure: Sheltered or open
Native range: Species native to New Zealand
Toxicity / pet & child safety: Generally considered non-toxic to people and pets
Carex comans bronze form is a soft, arching sedge with fine, hair-like coppery-bronze foliage forming a flowing mound. Its unusual metallic-brown colour brings warmth and texture to borders, gravel and pots.
GardenAdvice notes
A low, mound-forming evergreen sedge from New Zealand, this is grown for its remarkable fine, hair-like foliage in warm coppery-bronze tones, which flows and tumbles like flowing hair. Its metallic-brown colour is entirely natural, and it brings unusual warmth, movement and texture to borders, gravel gardens and containers.
Growing & planting
Plant in spring or autumn in moist but well-drained, humus-rich soil, in full sun to partial shade. Space about 40cm apart; it establishes into a neat clump. Improve very dry or very wet ground before planting. It appreciates sharp drainage, especially over winter.
Care & maintenance
Sedges are not cut hard to the ground like many grasses. Instead, in spring comb through the clump with gloved fingers or a spring-tined rake to pull out the dead leaves, and trim off any tatty foliage; a very untidy plant can be cut back harder to encourage fresh growth. Water in dry spells, as most sedges dislike drying out, and divide congested clumps in spring.
Propagation
- Division: Lift and divide clumps in spring — quick, easy and the standard method.
- Seed: Species can be raised from seed, though named forms are best from division.
Pests & diseases
Generally trouble-free. Aphids occasionally occur, and clumps can rot or die out in the centre in cold, wet, poorly drained conditions. Good drainage and combing out dead growth keep plants healthy.
Uses in the garden
Superb in gravel gardens, mixed and contemporary borders, as contrast among greens and silvers, and in containers, where its flowing bronze foliage spills attractively over the edges.
Wildlife value
The dense tufts provide ground-level cover for insects and small creatures, and sedges support a range of wildlife in damp and naturalistic plantings.
Toxicity & safety
Sedges are generally regarded as non-toxic to people and pets.
GardenAdvice tip
A word that reassures many customers: the coppery-brown colour of this sedge is completely natural and healthy — it is not dead or dying, but its normal, year-round colour. Give it good light to keep the colour rich, don’t cut it down like a grass (just comb out any truly dead leaves in spring), and in cold, wet gardens give it sharp drainage, as winter wet is more of a threat than cold.
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