Position: Full sun
Soil: Moist, well drained
Flowering period: Summer
Eventual Height: 60cm
Eventual Spread: 30cm
Hardiness: 7a, 7b, 8a, 8b, 9a, 9b, 10a, 10b
Family: Poaceae
Nassella tenuissima is a deciduous grass with a tufted habit. Its foliage is composed of narrow linear to filament-like, tightly in rolled bright green leaves. Throughout the summer it will bear a profusion of narrow nodding, softly feathery panicles that are up to 30cm long and greenish white at first becoming buff.
Nassella tenuissima, commonly known as Mexican Feather Grass is native to Chile, Texas, New Mexico, Mexico and Argentina. It was also known under the botanical name Stipa tenuissima until very recently.
The etymological root of the binomial name Nassella is derived from the Latin nassa which was a basket with a narrow neck that was used to catch fish. Tenuissima is derived from the Latin tenuis meaning ‘slender’ and the whole name to mean ‘most slender’.
Nassella tenuissima may be useful to the landscape architect as a maintenance free grass in a prairie style scheme. As it is drought tolerant it is also suited to xeriscaping. In warmer climates this plant may become invasive, growing in cracks of paved areas, it has already become naturalised on the south west coast of America and is prohibited in Australia.
Nassella tenuissima will tolerate almost any soil conditions; it will be happy in acid, neutral or alkaline pH levels, in loam, sand, chalk or clay based soils in a sheltered or exposed location facing any aspect.
Nassella tenuissima will not have a large positive ecological impact as it is not native to this continent and as such has no established symbiotic relationships or organisms, which prefer it as a habitat.
Nassella tenuissima requires no maintenance. Dead material may be cut back to the ground in late autumn.
invasive plant. get with it.