Silvery Glade Fern is a deciduous native fern with hairy stems and alternating deep green leaflets that turn straw brown in fall. Silvery Glade Fern has elongated spores on the underside of the pinnae in a herringbone pattern. Prefers partial shade and slightly acidic, moist, and well-drained soil.
Type: |
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Origins: |
East Asia and Eastern N. America; GA Native |
Height: |
2' - 3’ |
Spread: |
1.5’ - 3’ |
Spacing: |
2’ |
USDA Hardiness Zone: |
4 - 8 |
Culture: |
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Bloom Color: |
N/A |
Season of Interest: |
MAINTENANCE NEEDS: Low Maintenance. It requires constant moisture.
LANDSCAPE USES: Accents or Group Plantings, Borders, Woodland Garden,
Rock Gardens, Native Gardens, Houseplants, Containers.
COMPANION PLANTS: Blue Violet, Solomn’s Seal, Japanese Painted Fern
IMAGES: Wasp32, Deparia acrostichoides02, CC BY 4.0, (2) James St. John, Deparia acrostichoides (silvery glade fern) (25525476558), CC BY 2.0, (3) Photoset by Doug McGrady, Deparia acrostichoides (silvery false spleenwort), Woonsocket, RI (1)+(2), (4) Homer Edward Price, Silvery-Glade-Fern
*As plants have ranges in appearance they may not appear as the images shown.