Garden Guru: The graceful Tut family of papyruses creates true elegance in your garden

Graceful Grasses Prince Tut is lit by the morning sun. Here, it is partnered with Superbells Pomegranate Punch and Superbells Dreamsicle calibrachoas, Primo Wild Rose heuchera and Superbena Royale Chambray and Superbena Whiteout verbenas.
Graceful Grasses Prince Tut is lit by the morning sun. Here, it is partnered with Superbells Pomegranate Punch and Superbells Dreamsicle calibrachoas, Primo Wild Rose heuchera and Superbena Royale Chambray and Superbena Whiteout verbenas.

Norman Winter is a horticulturist. He is a former director of the Coastal Georgia Botanical Gardens. Follow him on Facebook at Norman Winter “The Garden Guy.” See more columns by Norman at SavannahNow.com/lifestyle/home-garden/.

Prince Tut and the dwarf exquisite Queen Tut papyrus grasses have put the proverbial ‘ta-da’ in the Garden Guys’ containers this year. The story, however, really goes back to October. I have two containers I call "smoke stacked" in their shape.

They are about 20-inches tall, ceramic glazed and about the diameter of a Frisbee. These containers get adjusted two or three times a year and I am headed to where they were what I call, "Tut Tweaked."

Graceful Grasses Queen Tut is a dwarf papyrus, perfect for giving a vertical element to small containers.
Graceful Grasses Queen Tut is a dwarf papyrus, perfect for giving a vertical element to small containers.

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I planted Superbells Grape Punch and Superbells Tangerine Punch calibrachoas in the container that always have Goldilocks Creeping Jenny and White Knight sweet alyssum acting perennial for me. They came through the winter perfectly, perhaps flinching a day or two after we got 21 degrees on March 13.

In early April, I had the opportunity to try the new Supertunia Mini Vista Scarlet petunia. The containers already looked full and fairly fluffy and really pleasing. I used my trowel to gently part or start a crevice in between the runners of the Creeping Jenny. Then I used my fingers to fashion the hole in the potting soil just right for planting the petunia. A week or so later I received Graceful Grasses Queen Tut papyrus.

Graceful Grasses Prince Tut can reach 4 to 6 feet tall creating an elegant look to containers, landscape beds or water features.
Graceful Grasses Prince Tut can reach 4 to 6 feet tall creating an elegant look to containers, landscape beds or water features.

I felt this would be the perfect vertical, but dwarf element for these containers. I admit in a yard full of monster perennials, I really had become slack in choosing vertical plants for height in containers. The Queen Tut was grown in a little larger container with a more vigorous root system. I fashioned a little larger hole using the same method. I really can’t tell that any detrimental root disturbance occurred.

Queen Tut will reach about 2 feet tall with a spread of 12 inches. I don’t have that much room for spread in these smoked containers and will cut back as needed. These are considered annuals for most of the country as they are cold hardy in Zones 9 and warmer. I will evaluate their fate when October planting rolls around.

The late afternoon sun lights up the curly tufts of Graceful Grasses Prince Tut papyrus, grown here in a white self-watering AquaPot with Primo Wild Rose heuchera, Superbells Dreamsicle calibrachoa and Superbena Whiteout and Superbena Royale Chambray verbenas.
The late afternoon sun lights up the curly tufts of Graceful Grasses Prince Tut papyrus, grown here in a white self-watering AquaPot with Primo Wild Rose heuchera, Superbells Dreamsicle calibrachoa and Superbena Whiteout and Superbena Royale Chambray verbenas.

I did much the same thing with two white self-watering AquaPots. They were planted in October with Primo Wild Rose heuchera, Superbells Dreamsicle calibrachoa, Superbena White Out and Superbena Royale Chambray verbenas. Though these containers were eye-popping they were adjusted or tweaked in April, so to speak, by adding Graceful Grasses Prince Tut the Proven Winners National Annual of the Year and Superbells Pomegranate Punch calibrachoa.

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Graceful Grasses Prince Tut is the Proven Winners National Annual of the Year.
Graceful Grasses Prince Tut is the Proven Winners National Annual of the Year.

Prince Tut is one of the most loved grasses for containers and flower beds. It will reach 30 inches tall, perhaps a little taller in the South and screams "look at me." When the early morning sun hits the curly tufts of foliage, you become mesmerized. It is cold hardy to Zones 10 and warmer, but you’ll find it to be priceless as an annual.

King Tut papyrus is the leader of the family and is used the same way, as thrillers, as accents in the garden and even outstanding as a water garden feature. It reaches close to 6 feet in height which is small compared to those growing along the Nile River. It is the granddaddy in the United States, garnering 147 awards.

The Tut family of papyrus are must-have plants whether you want to use them in the landscape or in containers. The design possibilities will be endless. If you feel like you are too late this season for some reason, just remember the Garden Guy's method of adjusting your containers with fresh plant material, you will always find you can do some Tut Tweaking to put the finishing touches to your designer containers.

This article originally appeared on Savannah Morning News: The Tut family of papyrus grasses bring verticality to your garden