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If Molinia caerulea subspecies arundinacea seems a mouthful of marbles of a name, the ornamental grasses it belongs to is as lithe and graceful as a catwalk super model. This is the perfect time to see them strut their stuff in the autumn borders.

Stamp Juan Ignacio Molinia

According to the excellent website seedaholic, the genus is named after Juan Ignacio Molina, a 19th century Chilean scientist and naturalist. As a Jesuit priest he was exiled in 1768 and settled in Bologna.

Close up of mo,India flowers

‘Caerulea’ simply means deep blue and describes the colour of the florets. The spikelets are made up of masses of these minute true flowers, hence the common name purple moor-grass. However, in the autumn as seed sets and ripens they turn a rich buttery yellow, soon after stems and foliage follow suit.

Taller forms at about 2 metres or more are named ‘arundinacea’ as in arundo for being reed-like, although many are found in damp and acidic heath or moorlands they happily tolerate all but the driest soils. There are two main types of tall purple moor grass, they either have a pronounced upright or arching habit. Both have distinctive flowers arranged in panicles held high above a metre high mound of mid green foliage.

Molinia ‘Windspiel’

Molinia windspiel paddock

Upright forms in autumn look like amber Roman candles and make good vertical accents. They have densely packed flowering heads of elongated seeds. Of the many fine cultivars the classic is ‘Karl Foerster’ but tallest of all is ‘Skyracer’, the one I grow in large numbers is ‘Windspiel’. These are one of the best grasses for exposed sites or squeezing into tight spaces. A band of them encircles the seating area in the paddock, it acts as a light raised screen behind the low hedge of dwarf Miscanthus ‘Starlight’.

Molinia windspiel

From within the seating area the slim tubular stems create an impression of seclusion without enclosing the space. The lower growing miscanthus conceals the mound of leaves once they start to look a bit bedraggled, this also hides the gaps in the planting once the molinia is cut back in December. Many deciduous grasses have excellent winter presence, alas molinia is not one of them, but the autumn finale is dazzling.

Molinia windspiel

Part of the fun of using them is siting them to allow glimpses of views or planting beyond. A wide range of uniformly coloured light or dark backgrounds help set it off, one of the simplest and most effective contrasts I’ve seen is in a friend’s garden where molinia is planted to be seen against a black shed.

Molinia windspiel

The row in full sun in the nursery are bronzed from top to toe by late October, interplanted with Verbena bonariensis makes for a bold combination at this time of year.

Mo,India Windpseil verbena bonariensis

Before the transformation took place the effect was subtle, we’d had heavy rain that day, ‘Windspiel’ shrugged it off with aplomb.

Molinia windspiel November

Arrow straight, the flower spikes contrast dramatically with the more pendulous ‘Transparent’.

Molinia ‘Transparent’

Molinia spikelet against sky

Arching forms of Molinia have distinctly diaphanous charms, the most popular being ‘Transparent’ for its gauze of fine beads. The see-through quality makes them splendid front of border plants, part of their charm is the way they wheel above their neighbours in the wind.

Molinia transparent

A mature specimen laden with rain is a beautiful sight, in the right site they quickly dry and regain their poise. This one planted at a pinch point on the corner of the Round Bed has an endearing habit of embracing passers by, rather than move it or tie it up, I tend to snip off the front portion of the flowering stems.

Molinia transparent

Grown in full sun above makes for a more upright form compared with the one below.

Molinia Transparent at a pinch point

Grown in the shade of the big blue cedar this is one of two metre square clumps of ‘Transparent’ laden with rain. On days like this the veterans bow across the path and the drive.

Molinia transparent

Remarkably passing cars don’t bother them, they swish back into position just like a curtain.

Persicaria Molina Transparent

Practicalities aside, arching forms make the finest veils of all, without the curving stems the effect wouldn’t be as dreamily romantic.

Molinia Bergfreund

Molinia Bergfreund autumn

‘Bergfreund’ or ‘Mountain Friend’ has the most extreme arching form, I couldn’t resist the charming name. They’d look stunning tumbling down a boulder strewn slope ….

Molinia bergfreund

Mine overhang a retaining wall of modest height. They were planted quite roughly on top of the rubble infill with a token amount of loam, as with all new grasses they were watered when necessary for the first year or two. I’m surprised they’ve done so well, perhaps their substantial roots have found their way through to the underlying sticky clay. Here they’re interplanted with Rudbeckia deamii.

Molinia Bergfreund yellow Crocosmia

In late summer the substantial clumps of mid green foliage make a good foil for an unknown yellow crocosmia, in turn it is hemmed in between the edge of the wall and the stout hummocks of grass.

Seed raised molinia

Molinia seed raised

Molinia self seeds with gay abandon, especially in moist mulch, so raising large numbers from seed is very easy. Seed from ‘Transparent’ and ‘Windspiel’ was thinly sown in shallow trays in the autumn of 2012, grown on in 9cm pots then planted in nursery beds until this spring when they were transplanted to the meadow.

Molinia stems

Despite being raised from seed rather than by division, it’s still possible to spot the family resemblance from the flowering spikes. It will be another year before the arching starts in the beadier form. What is noticeable growing them side by side is that there is a further point of difference : those that are from Windspiel colour earlier, more quickly and more distinctly than those that are from Transparent.

Molina Meadow November

The meadow has been such a lot of fun this year and full of delightful surprises. The one drawback is that the molinia show will be over all too soon, leaving the pale understory of deschampsia to take us through the winter and me eagerly waiting for next year’s encore.