Hiya,
I know this is so sad but no one else seems to know so I thought I'd ask you lot.
We bought this house a couple of years ago and it has some rather large plants in the garden.
Problem is they are getting a bit out of control and I have no idea what they are or how best to look after them.
Any ideas anyone?
The second one has white fluffy feathery kind of things at the end of the sticks in the winter but now that has fell off the sticks are just falling to bits and I don't know whether to cut them down or pull them out from the root?
Cheers,
Suzy
Suzy 2009.06.30, 12:16PM — Gardening and plants
Stickman 2009.06.30, 12:21PM —
Don't know the first one, but the second one is Pampas Grass. Lots of info on Google of course, including the suggestion that it's a secret signal for swingers...
jamiec 2009.06.30, 12:21PM —
Wow they are pretty large. Not seen the top one before but the bottom one is quite common.
In terms of maintainence, early spring is usually the best time to prune things back, and I would be tempted to cut those big things down rather than pull them up (that is if you want them to grow back).
You should be able to cut them back round the outsides if you want to just control their overgrowth. Most plants will recover the worst butchering.
/gardening geek.
Big Ern 2009.06.30, 12:28PM —
Gardening geek here as well. Unfortunately, I only know vegetables.
Having said that, cutting those dead shoot things back would be a good idea. My shrub rule of thumb is that if it's dead, cut it off/back... I've never killed anything yet by cutting *touch wood*.
If you need advice on veg garden pests, I'm your man. 
Suzy 2009.06.30, 12:31PM —
Cheers guys, I knew someone here would know 
I have no idea what those things are growing out of the first one but they are getting higher than the upstairs windows and we have 3 of those plants in the garden.
Stickman 2009.06.30, 12:32PM —
We have something like the first one (only brown, not green, and without the sticky-up bits) in our garden, and Mrs S tells me it's a Phormium. She also said that her Dad had one which he cut back a while ago, and in doing so killed it. So do your research before doing anything drastic! 
Suzy 2009.06.30, 12:37PM —
It's definitely not a Phormium and the leaves look a lot softer than one of those. The leaves are exactly the same on all 3 but there is only that one that has the weird things coming out of the top.
Suzy 2009.06.30, 12:46PM —
So with it saying you should cut it back in spring should I leave them and just cut back the second one?
scudsucker 2009.06.30, 12:47PM —
Top one is very like a plant we get here, in South Africa, mostly in the wild. More so that the a phornium looks, to me at least.
You can cut of the flowering part (the top stick-like things) safely.. I'll ask my girlfriend to have a look, she's into gardening and SA plants
Hariyemadzisawira nhaka yedu. Down the scud and win!
Suzy 2009.06.30, 12:50PM —
So I have a New Zealand Flax and a Pampas Grass. I can impress people know with my knowledge when they ask what they are 
Technomancer 2009.06.30, 12:55PM —
Yep, I'd say it's a phormium - the 'weird things' coming out of the top are the flower stems - I never managed to get mine to flower in the UK, though the couple we have out here have flowered and set seed already.
With the pampas grass, once it has finished flowering and set seed (the soft frondy stems that are now just dry tubes), you can pull the sticks out, they should come free relatively easily.
Everyone should believe in something
I believe I'll have another drink
One can always find solace in Gin
boo 2009.06.30, 02:12PM —
the top thing looks awfully similar to a mutant yucca plant we had in oregon - and yeah - they get crazy huge and will poke the crap outta you - but i loved it and it produced big stalks of white cream flowers each spring.
as for the pampas grass - good fucking luck. i cut ours back every year to about a foot tall and by August it's usually 10ft plus. and i think the roots must go to core of the earth.
my brother in law couldnt get rid of his so he doused it in kerosene and tossed a match - it burned/smoldered for 5 days
swampy 2009.06.30, 02:31PM —
I have one of the first ones in my back garden, it's new zealand flax. just cut the bugger back, it will recover.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phormium
The things growing out of it are flowers, they turn into seed pods eventually. They only grow if you let the plant mature rather than hacking it back (at least in my experience)
Pampass grass is an advert for swingers. I grow loads of it.
Suzy 2009.06.30, 02:39PM —
Originally posted by: swampy
I have one of the first ones in my back garden, it's new zealand flax. just cut the bugger back, it will recover.
Cheers swampy

Do I just cut the ends of the leaves where they are going yellow or as far back as I can get?
swampy 2009.06.30, 02:40PM —
I chopped mine right back (about half way down the leaves), I'll take a photo to show you tonight if I remember.
The leaves are pretty tough and fibrous though!
Stickman 2009.06.30, 02:41PM —
Originally posted by: swampy
I have one of the first ones in my back garden, it's new zealand flax.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phormium
Pampass grass is an advert for swingers.
*looks up*

