Pro Gardeners Swear By This Simple Design Trick for a Low-Fuss, Textured Garden – And This Week is Your Last Chance to Plant Them in Time for Spring

Beautiful grass and bulb combinations bring color, texture, and height to borders and beds

Mixed garden border full of grasses and flowers. Garden path cutting down the center
(Image credit: Future)

Winter is often a time of reflection, where we start to think about how we want our gardens to look next year. Among the plants we switch out, it's important to establish some reliable foundations that provide a framework for the yard.

I recently spoke to some of the experts at Chicago Botanic Garden who revealed one of their favorite ways to do this: planting ornamental grass and bulb pairings. They explain the grasses provide a permanent foundation, decorated by spring bulbs. The grasses then hide the unsightly fading flowers and foliage later in the year, making it an effective duo.

Mixed flower border with pink blooms and grasses

(Image credit: A Garden via Alamy)

3 Stunning Ornamental Grass and Bulb Pairings

This design trick is most effective when you naturalize bulbs, i.e. plant them in a way that allows them to spread and multiply on their own. Each spring, they'll pop up and offer some color among the ornamental grasses without you having to replant each year. It's one of the best ways to achieve naturalistic planting.

1. Moor Grass and Daffodils

Moor grass alongside yellow daffodils

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  • Best for: meadow-style planting

This ornamental grass and bulb pairing comes straight from Chicago Botanic Garden, specifically the Shida Evaluation Garden.

There, mounds of moor grass offer year-round interest, turning from deep green in summer to bronze and orange in fall.

As spring comes along, 20,000 daffodils emerge on the mounds. At this time, the moor grass has new growth with light green blades forming a backdrop to the sea of daffodils.

As the daffodils die back, the moor grass fills out to offer dense foliage that hides the fading daffodils.

Alongside this effortless cycle the pair go through, they also work well together because they thrive in a well-draining soil type.

Plus, moor grass forms tight root clumps that don't disrupt or damage daffodil bulbs beneath the ground.

You can personalize this to your garden color scheme by choosing from the many types of narcissus and moor grasses, including the striking purple moor grass (Molinia caerulea).

Explore daffodil bulbs at Burpee.

Find moor grass seeds on Amazon.

2. Fountain Grass and Alliums

Fountain grass alongside purple sensation allium

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  • Best for: dramatic texture

If you're looking for an ornamental grass and bulb pairing for height in the middle or back of the border, grass and lawn expert Steven Corcoran recommends fountain grass and alliums.

'In early spring you want to cut back fountain grass to encourage new healthy growth,' Steve says. 'Tall alliums, like 'Purple Sensation' (bulbs from Amazon), provide height during this time,' he adds.

As the fountain grass puts on new growth, it adds texture to this display.

Towards the ends of summer, fountain grass flowers form, with fluffy foxtail blooms taking over interest as allium flowers fade.

Once again, there are lots of allium bulbs and types of fountain grass to choose from, so you can personalize how much their height differs in your yard.

For example, 'Purple Sensation' stands tall at around 30 inches, looking even more dramatic when underplanted by 12-inch 'Little Bunny' fountain grass. The latter also has a pink tint to its flowers in later summer and fall, nodding to the purple alliums that were previously blooming there.

Explore allium bulbs at Burpee.

Explore fountain grass varieties at Nature Hills.

A headshot of Steve Corcoran - a man wearing a black cap and t-shirt, standing in front of a stone wall
Steven Corcoran

Steven Corcoran is the CEO of Lawn Love, a company that is bringing high-tech solutions to the lawn care industry. Lawn Love has helped thousands of commercial and residential customers connect with the absolute best local lawn care professionals.

3.  Leatherleaf Sedge and Crocus

Leatherleaf sedge alongside purple crocus flowers

(Image credit: STUDIO75/Clare Gainey via Alamy)
  • Best for: front of the border

For the front of a border, or even in a container, one of the best ornamental grass and bulb pairings is leatherleaf sedge and crocus bulbs – though crocus is technically a corm.

This is because both are shorter in height, with leatherleaf sedge forming clumps no taller than a couple of feet. You can then plant crocus to sit in front, reaching a height of six inches and adding bright pops of white, purple, and yellow to a backdrop of coppery foliage.

The beauty of this pairing is that you can also plant fall crocus for successional blooming just a few months after spring crocus fades, extending the display.

They work well together as companion plants, both preferring well-draining soil and a full sun position.

Find spring crocus bulbs on Amazon.

You can also try swapping out leatherleaf sedge for the many other types of sedge grass (view the selection available at Nature Hills).

FAQs

Can I Grow Ornamental Grasses and Bulbs Together in a Pot?

Yes, you can grow the best ornamental grasses and bulb pairings in a pot, so long as both are suited to this environment. It can bring stunning texture and color to your container garden, as well as year-round interest. Pots will work best for grasses and bulbs that like well-draining soil and don't mind being contained, otherwise you may end up with pot-bound plants. Just take care to use a planter large enough for a dynamic display like this, providing sufficient room for both plant's roots.


When creating your ornamental grass and bulb planting scheme, make sure not to make bulb planting mistakes. This includes planting them at the wrong depth. The below bulb planting accessories can help make your efforts a success:

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Tenielle Jordison
Gardens Content Editor

Tenielle is a Gardens Content Editor at Homes & Gardens. She holds a qualification in MA Magazine Journalism and has over six years of journalistic experience. Before coming to Homes & Gardens, Tenielle was in the editorial department at the Royal Horticultural Society and worked on The Garden magazine. As our in-house houseplant expert, Tenielle writes on a range of solutions to houseplant problems, as well as other 'how to' guides, inspiring garden projects, and the latest gardening news. When she isn't writing, Tenielle can be found propagating her ever-growing collection of indoor plants, helping others overcome common houseplant pests and diseases, volunteering at a local gardening club, and attending gardening workshops, like a composting masterclass.