Position
Full sun







Pennisetum
VAT included · plus
Your outdoor plant has just been packed, transported and unpacked, so give it a calm start before planting or placing it permanently. Remove all packaging carefully, check the pot, stems, visible roots and substrate moisture, and settle any loose growing medium back around the root ball. Water if the root ball feels dry, but do not leave the pot standing in water. For the first few days, keep the plant in a sheltered spot suited to its light needs, away from strong midday sun, heavy wind, frost and heat stress.
Do not move the plant straight into full exposure, especially if it is young, newly flushed, evergreen, recently pruned or greenhouse-grown. Gradually introduce more sun, wind and temperature variation over several days. If cold nights, storms, intense sun or hot dry weather are expected, keep the plant protected until conditions are more stable. Do not fertilize immediately after delivery; let the plant settle first and resume feeding only when it is actively growing and conditions are suitable.
Outdoor plants may arrive in different seasonal stages. Depending on the time of year, your plant may be leafy, flowering, newly sprouting, recently pruned, dormant, partly bare or leafless. Adjust care to what the plant is doing: actively growing plants need closer moisture checks, while dormant plants usually need protection from extremes and only light moisture management until growth resumes.
Plant outdoors when the soil is workable and weather conditions suit the plant type. Avoid planting during frost, heatwaves, waterlogged soil or very dry windy periods. It is better to keep the plant protected in its pot for a short time than to plant into stressful conditions. After planting, water thoroughly so the root ball and surrounding soil connect properly, then monitor moisture while the plant establishes.
Secure shipping, carefully packed orders with safe delivery across the EU, UK and Switzerland.
28-day plant guarantee, if a plant arrives damaged or fails soon after delivery, we help you make it right.
Free returns, simple, cost-free returns according to our policy.
For full details, please see:
Please head to our FAQ Page or Contact us.
Pennisetum alopecuroides 'Hameln' is a compact ornamental grass with a rounded, fountain-shaped habit and soft plumes that arrive as many summer flowers begin to fade. The foliage forms a tidy green clump through the growing season, then the bottlebrush flower heads rise above it from late summer into autumn. The effect is light, moving and tactile, especially when planted where low sun can catch the plumes. This set of 3 is useful for repeating the same texture through a sunny border, filling a large container group, or softening hard edges around paving. The repeated planting gives a calmer rhythm than single scattered grasses and helps late-season planting feel connected.
The cultivar is valued for staying manageable. It gives the late-season look of fountain grass in a scale that suits smaller gardens, courtyard beds and mixed perennial planting. In open ground it can build a full clump with arching leaves and a soft dome of flower stems. In a container it stays neater and slower, which can be useful on terraces where broad grass movement is wanted but space is controlled.
Fresh growth starts as temperatures rise in spring. The new leaves are narrow, green and arching, building gradually into a dense tussock. Flowering is a late-season feature, usually from August into October, with soft tan to buff plumes that age well. The clump can remain attractive into winter, as old stems and seed heads hold shape when conditions are dry and calm. The plant then renews from the base in spring after the old growth is cut away.
Full sun supports generous flowering, a firm habit and a strong autumn effect. Pennisetum alopecuroides 'Hameln' suits open borders, gravel planting with some root moisture, prairie-style perennial schemes and large patio pots. Air movement helps the clump dry after rain, and a position away from constant winter wet keeps the crown healthier. The plant works especially well near late-flowering perennials, low evergreens, sedums and simple paving where the plumes can stand out through shape and movement.
Clean drainage is important for a settled, long-lived clump. Chalk, loam and sandy soil can all suit this grass when water moves through the root zone. Very rich feeding is rarely needed; steady establishment and a warm position matter far more. On sandy ground, watering during long dry spells helps the plant keep foliage quality and plume production. On heavier soil, add grit and organic matter through the planting area to improve structure, then keep the crown at the same level as it was in the nursery pot.
Plant in spring or early autumn while the soil has enough warmth for roots to settle. Water the pot before planting, loosen circling roots gently, then set the crown level with the surrounding soil. Firm lightly and water in well. For a natural drift, use the 3 plants in a loose triangle or staggered line. A spacing of about 75 cm gives each clump room to arch and lets the outline remain clear.
For containers, choose a wide, stable pot with drainage holes and a gritty, peat-free outdoor mix. A heavier pot also helps keep the arching top growth steady during autumn wind and rain. In a container, the plant often stays smaller and fills out more gradually. They also warm up and dry out faster, so watering needs closer checking through warm weather. Check moisture by testing the upper 30 to 40% of pot depth; water deeply when that zone has dried and the pot feels lighter. Let excess water drain freely after each watering.
During the first growing season, keep moisture steady while roots establish. After that, Pennisetum alopecuroides 'Hameln' is fairly resilient in normal garden soil, yet it still performs best when long dry spells are matched with deep watering. In open ground, a light mulch around the plant helps reduce moisture swings while keeping the crown clear. In containers, a balanced liquid feed during active growth can support steady foliage and plume development.
Leave the old foliage standing through winter if the clump still looks good. It adds texture and helps shield the crown. Cut the plant back in late winter or early spring, before new shoots are well advanced. Use clean secateurs or shears and remove old thatch from the centre so light reaches the new growth. If an older clump becomes congested, division in spring can refresh vigour and create new plants for another sunny position.
Pennisetum alopecuroides 'Hameln' brings movement, late-season plumes, and a compact fountain habit to sunny planting. Use the 3 clumps as a small drift or in containers to repeat the same texture through late summer and autumn.
Sunny grassland, riverbanks and open slopes in East Asia.
Deciduous grass
Position
Full sun
Moisture
Average
Drainage
Well-drained
Hardiness
Hardy with shelter · -5°C
Mature size
60–90 × 60–75 cm
Winter habit
Herbaceous die-back
Bloom time
Summer, Autumn
Containers
Good in pots
Pruning
Spring