Carex pendula – Drooping Sedge – Pendulous Sedge – Weeping Sedge – Sedge –

Description

Carex – Sedge –

There are over 1500 species of deciduous and evergreen, rhizomatous, clump forming or tufted perennials, in this genus. They occur from temperate and arctic zones, as well as high altitudes in tropical regions, mostly in the Northern Hemisphere. Most species occur, in bog, moorland, or damp woodland, or by water. Sedges are grown for their variegated or colorful foliage, although some species have attractive catkin-like spikes. The general grass like leaves are usually sharp edged, linear, 3 ranked, and with leaf bases sheathing the triangular stems, which are solid and without nodes. Sedges are mainly monoecious, occasionally dioecious, and bear panicles of small, grass like flowers in short spikes. There are sedges for every site in the garden.

Grow in Fertile, moist or wet soil in sun or partial shade

In summer, cut out any dead leaves on evergreen species. Divide between mid spring and early summer.

Prone to rusts, smuts, fungal leaf spots, and aphids.

C. pendula – Drooping Sedge – Pendulous Sedge – Weeping Sedge – This tufted, evergreen perennial forming dense clumps is from Europe and Northern Africa and grows 4 ½’ feet tall and 5′ feet wide. It produces wide, keeled, shiny, mid green leaves, to 36″ long, and blue-green beneath. In late spring and early summer, arching stems, to 4 ½’ feet long, carry cylindrical, catkin like, dark brown flower spikes, to 6″ long, erect at first, they become pendent with age.

Zones 5-9