Carex rostrata

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Carex rostrata
Light:Full Sun Part Shade
Moisture:Mesic Hydric
Soil pH:5.6-8.4
Height:3'
Blooms:Early Summer-Mid Summer
Native to:
Edible Rating:PFAF Edibility Rating
Tea:Yes
Poisonous

Carex rostrata (common name: beaded sedge)

Propagation: Seed - sow in situ in the spring in a moist soil in light shade. If seed is in short supply it can be sown in a cold frame and be planted out in the summer. The seed usually germinates in 2 - 6 weeks at 15°c[1].

Division in spring[2]. Very easy, larger clumps can be replanted direct into their permanent positions, though it is best to pot up smaller clumps and grow them on in a cold frame until they are rooting well. Plant them out in the summer or following spring.

Cultivation: Easily grown in a damp to wet soil in full sun or shade[3][2].

Members of this genus are rarely if ever troubled by browsing deer[4].

Range: Most of Europe, including Britain, north to 71° N., W. Asia and N. America.

Habitat: Wet peaty places with a high water table[5].

Edibility: Root - cooked[6][7].

Seed[6]. No further details are given, but the seed is small and fiddly to use[K].

Usage: The straw is used for bedding[8].

Pollinators: Wind

Soil: Can grow in light, medium, and heavy soils.

Seed Ripens: Mid Summer-Late Summer

Flower Type: Monoecious

Links

References

  1. Bird, R. Growing from Seed Volume 3. Thompson and Morgan, 1989.
  2. 2.0 2.1 Huxley, Anthony. The New Royal Horticultural Society Dictionary of Gardening. MacMillan Press, 1992.
  3. Grounds, Roger. Ornamental Grasses. Christopher Helm, 1989.
  4. Thomas, Graham. Perennial Garden Plants. J. M. Dent & Sons, 1990.
  5. Clapham, Arthur and Tom Tootin, Edmund Warburg. Flora of the British Isles. Cambridge University Press, 1962.
  6. 6.0 6.1 Schofield, Janice. Discovering Wild Plants.
  7. Moerman, Daniel. Native American Ethnobotany. Timber Press, 1998.
  8. Usher, George. A Dictionary of Plants Used by Man. Constable, 1974.