Tags

, , ,

There is a mountain called Hakone which is covered in thick woods …. Along the dark trail uraha gusa grew from the stones to light our way.

These words might well have been written by a modern traveller enchanted with the luminous quality of what is more commonly known as Japanese Forest grass or Hakonechloa macra. In fact, they come from a fascinating memoir “The Sarashina Diary A Woman’s Life in Eleventh-Century Japan” translated by Sonja Arntzen and Moriyuki Ito (Columbia University Press, 2014). They also point to the conditions in which hakonechloa thrives, although a thousand years later gardeners have several more cultivars to choose from than would naturally have occurred in medieval Japan.

Hakonechloa macra

I first fell under the spell cast by gorgeous images of hakonechloa long before I encountered it in person, a bit closer to home, in 2008 in Knoll Gardens. The sight of hakonechloa macra planted as a luxuriantly textured ground cover surrounding an ornamental tree had me hooked, inevitably I came away with a dozen 9cm pots, regardless of where I was going to put them.

Hakonechloa macro steps yard July

After a couple of years in a nursery bed, they were planted out to edge a flight of concrete steps to the yard. Although plain leaved forms are the most vigorous, they’re not in a hurry. Plants generally “sleep, creep, leap” over 3 years, but allowances must be made for this grass, it likes an extra year to sit and think about it.

Hakonechloa macra spring

Patience is rewarded : the steps are dramatically softened from springtime onwards.

Snail damaged hostas

Hakonechloa relishes the same sort of conditions as the variegated hostas, fertile, moisture retentive soil but with the added bonus that once the hosta leaves are looking past their best the grass hides the late summer snail damage. Cooler weather suits it too, making it a very useful plant for UK gardens.

Hakonechloa winter

Then in winter, the dried leaves add interest to what would otherwise be bare ground.

Hakonechloa macra ‘Aureola’

I just love everything about Hakonechloa macra ‘Aureola’. I’m told that Hakonechloa macra ‘Alboaurea’ is just as good, if not better, and, I’m sure that may be so. But this is the cultivar I bumped into in 2010 and, as soon as I spotted them I knew it was my lucky day : as good sized 2 litre plants they had already passed the ‘sitting’ stage.

Variegated hakone grass

Here they alternately punctuate a narrow path, to deliberately slow progress between the busy front and quieter back garden. The beauty of any hakonechloa is that it drapes a surface with such grace, it can be brushed past with impunity. Even on a wet day there are no damp leaves languishing on the paving to worry about.

Hakonechloa aureola

Wading through the knee high mature clumps produces a very satisfying swish. The bamboo-like leaves are cool to the touch even on the hottest day.

Hakonechloa aureola and pennnisetum

My plan was to grow a couple in large pots (inspired by images of Adrian Bloom’s legendary variegated specimen that used to enjoy an annual outing to The Chelsea Flower Show.) However, the paler leaves appreciate more shade than I’d bargained for and first bleached, then scorched, then were hastily moved. For the first two years they were kept well watered, since then apart from a springtime mulch they’ve been happy to fend for themselves. Unlike many ornamental grasses, hakonechloa seems happy in the lee of other plants, in my garden it grows well beneath the lonicera hedge and curtsying to one side of the taller Pennisetum alopecuroides ‘Black Beauty’.

Of all the hakonechloa I enjoy growing, this is also the one that packs the biggest punch in the autumn and winter. Autumn sunshine sets the leaves smouldering, but it’s the low angled winter sun fortuitously striking the path that ignites the blaze.

Hakonechloa macra ‘Albostriata’

Hakonechloa ‘Albostriata’ is a boldly striped variety, arguably more yellow-green with the merest white splashes (but I find missing the pink tinge ‘Aureola’ assumes as the season turns to autumn). Perhaps it’s hard to be precise about the tonal characteristics of variegated hakonechloa unless the cultivars are grown in controlled conditions?

Bamboo and hakonechkoa

This cultivar copes with more direct sun, as under the stripped stems of the Phyllostchys aureosulcata spectabalis, plus it conveniently conceals the protruding lip of membrane controlling the bamboo’s root run. Planted into the sandy foundations of the patio, this is a tough place for plants to establish, they’ve done well.

Hakonechloa acer

Given the sunnier site these clumps are already producing inconspicuous burgundy coloured inflorescences, they’re discretely tucked among the leaves but worth seeking out if you like the fine detail of plants.

Hakonechloa 'Albostriata'

‘Albostriata’ is a shorter cultivar than the previous two, at about 12″ in this spot, possibly the dry, sunny conditions keeps it lean. As you’d expect, Japanese Forest Grass compliments acers, I particularly like the combination in the autumn.

Hakonechloa macra ‘Stripe it Rich’

Hakonechloa macra ‘Stripe it Rich’ is one of the latest modern cultivars growing on in splendid isolation in a pot until it can hold its own in the ground. Right now, Geranium Sirak would swamp it!

Hakonechloa stripe it rich Hakonechloa macra is unusual in that it’s monotypic – a genus that has only one species. It’s also from a specific habitat, therefore new cultivars have both immense interest and value. Unsurprisingly, specialist nurseries covet discoveries such as this white and gold variegation of ‘All Gold’ and, accordingly, win well-deserved Plant Breeders Rights. A dwarf form at 6″ in height, the form of Urahagusa in the image above wouldn’t have been around to guide Sarashina through those shady woods, but ‘Stripe it Rich’ is just the sort of gem to light up the eyes of a modern day collector.