Description
Sideoats Grama is a keystone Great Plains native grass valued for habitat restoration, meadow structure, and ornamental seed stems. Bouteloua curtipendula forms fine-textured 1-3 ft bunches with distinctive red, oat-like flowers arranged along one side of each stem, then shifts toward copper-gold color in autumn.
Why Grow It
- Keystone North American native grass for prairie, meadow, and rangeland restoration.
- Distinctive red, dangling, oat-like flowers line one side of the seed stems.
- Deep-rooted, drought-tolerant perennial bunchgrass that helps stabilize soil.
- Supports wildlife with cover, nesting structure, forage value, and native pollinator habitat.
- Perennial in zones 3-10 with best performance in full sun and well-drained to dry soil.
Growing Information
| Botanical name | Bouteloua curtipendula |
|---|---|
| Life cycle | Warm-season perennial native bunchgrass |
| Mature height | 1-3 ft. |
| Light | Full sun |
| Bloom or harvest window | Summer seed stems; copper-gold autumn color |
| Seed count | 100 seeds |
| Color and texture | Green fine-textured foliage with red, oat-like one-sided flower spikes; copper-gold in fall |
| Sowing advice | Sow after frost when soil is warming, or dormant sow in late fall for prairie-style restoration. Press seed into a prepared, weed-free seedbed and cover very lightly with well-drained soil. |
| Spacing | Broadcast thinly for meadow plantings, or space plugs/clumps 12-18 in. apart in native borders |
| Germination | Usually germinates best with warmth, bright light, and steady moisture; keep young seedlings weed-free while deep roots establish |
Best For
- prairie restoration
- native meadow plantings
- drought-tolerant borders
- soil stabilization
- bird cover and nesting habitat
- pollinator and wildlife habitat
Packet Details
Includes 100 seeds. Store seeds cool, dry, and dark until sowing. For restoration plantings, prepare the site carefully and control weeds while seedlings establish.
FAQ
Is Sideoats Grama a wildflower?
No. It is a warm-season native perennial grass, often paired with native wildflowers in prairie and meadow plantings.
Where does it grow best?
Choose full sun and well-drained to dry soil. Once established, Sideoats Grama is drought tolerant and useful for low-water native plantings.
How should I sow the seed?
Prepare a weed-free seedbed, press seed in, and cover only lightly. Sow after frost when soil is warming, or dormant sow in late fall for restoration-style plantings.






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