| The cultivar 'muskingumensis' is a tufted evergreen or semi-evergreen with 30 inch bright green leaves on erect stems. It produces 1 inch flowers spikes in May and July. Sedges are wind-pollinated, with flower-heads almost always in spikelets.
C. muskingumensis bears numerous, narrow, tapered green leaves from lax stems, growing to 2 feet tall. Insignificant flowers are borne in June. The Sedge family is quite large, including more than 1,500 species, both evergreen and deciduous. These can be found from the coldest climates and high altitudes all the way to the tropics. All sedge are essentially grasslike in appearance and range in size from extremely small tufts of two inches in height up to large clumps of six or more feet in height and half that in spread. Sedge are nearly always grown for the appearance of foliage as the flower spikes and while attractive, are often quite inconspicuous. |