• HOME
  • Container Gardens
  • Houseplants
  • Edible Gardening
  • Garden Design
  • Caring for Your Yard
  • Flowers
  • Pest & Problem Fixes
  • Trees, Shrubs & Vines
  • Landscaping
  • Garden Plans
  • Gardening Routine
  • Terms of Use
  • About Us
  • Privacy Policy
kirozone.topkirozone.top
  • HOME
  • Container Gardens
  • Houseplants
  • Edible Gardening
  • Garden Design
  • Caring for Your Yard
  • Flowers
  • Pest & Problem Fixes
  • Trees, Shrubs & Vines
  • Landscaping
  • Garden Plans
  • Gardening Routine
kirozone.top kirozone.top
kirozone.top » Garden Design » Birds Will Flock to Your Garden When You Plant Grasses for Wildlife 
Garden Design

Birds Will Flock to Your Garden When You Plant Grasses for Wildlife 

Birds Will Flock to Your Garden When You Plant Grasses for Wildlife 

Ornamental grasses provide beautiful texture, movement, and color to the landscape. They make excellent accent plants for beds and borders, and many even work well in containers. Adding grasses for wildlife will bring birds to flock and feed in your garden. These bird-friendly grasses offer seed-filled plumes and dense foliage for cover and nesting material.

Allow ornamental grasses birds love to remain standing with their seed heads through the winter. Then, during the following spring, before the new growth appears, cut your grasses back to a few inches above the ground.

Here are the ornamental grasses to plant in your garden to keep the birds coming back year after year.

1. Switchgrass

One of the best perennials with showstopping fall-foliage color and texture is switchgrass. Selections of this gorgeous North American native prairie grass such as 'Shenandoah' and 'Rotstrahlbusch' have outstanding red fall color. 'Heavy Metal' is a variety that features metallic-blue leaves, which turn yellow in autumn.

Ground-feeding songbirds and gamebirds eat the fallen seeds from this grass's showy seed plumes. Reseeding is a problem for some varieties in certain areas. Cover exposed soil with a 3-inch layer of mulch to prevent your switchgrass from spreading out of bounds. Or plant it in a naturalist garden where it can spread out as it pleases.

Name: Panicum virgatum

Growing Conditions: Full sun to part shade in medium to wet soil

Size: Up to 6 feet tall

Zones: 5-9

Buy It: Shenandoah Switch Grass 2-Pack ($40, The Home Depot)

2. Blue Fescue

The steely-blue foliage of blue fescue makes a striking garden accent. Though the seed heads of this drought-tolerant ornamental grass aren't very showy, it's an excellent grass for wildlife because birds like to eat the seeds. They'll also use the dense foliage as winter cover and nesting material.

This low-growing grass forms tidy mounds that work well for edging your beds and borders or as a groundcover in a sunny spot.

Name: Festuca glauca

Growing Conditions: Full sun and well-drained soil

Size: Up to 1 foot tall

Zones: 4-8

Buy It: Elijah Blue Fescue Grass ($30, The Home Depot)

3. Little Bluestem

Named for the lavender-blue color on its stem bases, little bluestem is a native warm-season grass common in tallgrass prairie areas. However, the most striking feature of this plant is its bronze-orange fall foliage color that lasts through winter snows.

Little bluestem is a wonderful grass for wildlife because its seeds feed birds—including cardinals, buntings, finches, grosbeaks, sparrows, and towhees—from fall into spring. Birds such as field sparrows and common yellowthroats like to build nests in little bluestem's dense foliage.

Name: Schizachyrium scoparium

Growing Conditions: Full sun and well-drained soil

Size: Up to 4 feet tall

Zones: 3-9

4. Canada Wild Rye

Another North American native ornamental grass, Canada wild rye looks right at home in a low-maintenance prairie garden. This fast-growing, short-lived perennial grass has beautiful, curving seed heads that look like cultivated rye spikes. When there's a breeze, these seedy spikes bob and sway, living up to another common name for this plant: nodding wild rye.

Birds love to eat the seeds and rely on the foliage for making nests. When landscaping with this ornamental grass, avoid planting it in areas frequented by dogs or children because the seed heads are somewhat prickly and could cause injury.

Name: Elymus canadensis

Growing Conditions: Full sun and well-drained soil

Size: Up to 5 feet tall

Zones: 3-9

Buy It: Canada Wild Rye Native Starter Plant ($7, Etsy)

5. Indian Grass

Another native plant found in tallgrass prairies, Indian grass makes the perfect habitat for ground-nesting birds such as mourning doves and bobwhite quail. Many birds love to eat the seeds in this plant's feathery, light brown plumes.

Indian grass adds a bold vertical accent to the landscape with its upright blue-green foliage, which turns orange-yellow in autumn. Look for the variety 'Sioux Blue,' which sports metallic-blue foliage that shines in natural gardens and prairie plantings. Indian grass is also helpful in managing slope erosion.

Name: Sorghastrum nutans

Growing Conditions: Full sun and well-drained soil

Size: Up to 5 feet tall

Zones: 4-9

Buy It: Ornamental Indian Grass Seeds ($3, Etsy)

6. Tufted Hairgrass

One of the few ornamental grasses for wildlife that grows in a shady garden, tufted hairgrass is a cool-season native species. Game birds and songbirds love to eat the seeds, and in wet areas, this fine-textured grass provides cover to nesting waterfowl. Its short height makes tufted hairgrass a good choice for smaller landscapes and urban gardens. Try planting it in a border with shade-loving perennials such as ferns and hostas.

Name: Deschampsia cespitosa

Growing Conditions: Part shade and moist to wet, well-drained soil

Size: Up to 3 feet tall

Zones: 4-9

Buy It: Deschampsia Cespitosa Seeds ($7, Amazon)

Related Posts

When Is the Best Time to Mow Your Lawn?

Here's What to Plant with Geraniums for Pretty Summer Containers

15 Best Fall Flowers for Pots to Enjoy Some Late-Season Color

How to Deadhead Roses the Right Way So They Keep Blooming

Your Seasonal Lawn-Care Schedule for the Midwest

4 Grass Alternatives for Yards with Major Curb Appeal

How to Plant and Grow Freesia

How to Plant and Grow French Marigold

How to Plant and Grow Sword Fern

4 Reasons Why Your Rubber Plant Leaves Are Falling Off, And How to Fix Them

How to Plant and Grow Rose of Jericho

How to Fertilize Indoor Plants for the Lushest Growth

How to Plant and Grow Alpine Strawberries

Here's Exactly When to Harvest Potatoes (Plus How to Do It Correctly)

6 Natural Ways to Keep Mosquitoes from Ruining the Party

How to Get Rid of Skunks in Your Yard Without Getting Sprayed

Children's Vegetable Garden Plan: Perfect for Kids to Grow Food!

How to Make a Rock Garden

21 Colorful Rock Garden Plants That Thrive in Poor Soil

What Is a Permaculture Garden? Plus 12 Tips for Planting Your Own

When Is the Best Time to Mow Your Lawn?
Here's What to Plant with Geraniums for Pretty Summer Containers
15 Best Fall Flowers for Pots to Enjoy Some Late-Season Color
How to Deadhead Roses the Right Way So They Keep Blooming
Your Seasonal Lawn-Care Schedule for the Midwest
4 Grass Alternatives for Yards with Major Curb Appeal
How to Plant and Grow Freesia
How to Plant and Grow French Marigold
How to Plant and Grow Sword Fern
4 Reasons Why Your Rubber Plant Leaves Are Falling Off, And How to Fix Them
How to Plant and Grow Rose of Jericho
How to Fertilize Indoor Plants for the Lushest Growth
How to Plant and Grow Alpine Strawberries
Here's Exactly When to Harvest Potatoes (Plus How to Do It Correctly)
6 Natural Ways to Keep Mosquitoes from Ruining the Party
How to Get Rid of Skunks in Your Yard Without Getting Sprayed
Children's Vegetable Garden Plan: Perfect for Kids to Grow Food!
How to Make a Rock Garden
21 Colorful Rock Garden Plants That Thrive in Poor Soil
What Is a Permaculture Garden? Plus 12 Tips for Planting Your Own
kirozone.top ©2025
  • Terms of Use
  • About Us
  • Privacy Policy