The Hardy Cattail

The Bulrush - A Versatile Food and Foliage Plant for the Pond Garden

© Tricia Edgar

May 23, 2009
Cattail, or Bulrush, irum
The cattail is an excellent choice for the water garden. It is a hardy, useful food plant with beautiful foliage.

Cattails (Typha genus) are hardy plants, colonizing disturbed and muddy areas of the pond garden. They will grow in cooler climates, making them ideal for outdoor pond and water gardens in most of North America. For those with small gardens, cattails are suitable for the container water garden as well, though they will not become as large as they can when in an open pond or marsh.

Cattails are a Beautiful Water and Marsh Plant

Cattails are a visually striking addition to the water garden. Their long, thin leaves catch the wind and make a beautiful backdrop for smaller pond plants. The most impressive part of the cattail is the flower. The female fruiting spike is fuzzy and brown and can be up to 40 centimeters long. The name “cattail” likely comes from the long, brown and furry-looking spike of the plant, which looks like a cat’s tail. In the United Kingdom, these plants are commonly known as bulrushes.

Growing Cattails in the Pond Garden

Cattails are fairly simple to grow. They can reproduce from their rhizomes, which means that they often create dense marshes thick with cattails. Cattail plants can also reproduce from seed. The plant will grow anywhere the soil is quite wet. While they enjoy growing in areas with a lot of organic matter, the plants themselves produce so much detritus that after the first year, there is rarely a need for the pond or water gardener to coddle the cattails with extra organics.

Cattails Thrive in Difficult Environments

This is a hardy and abundant plant. Since it reproduces underground and pops up from rhizomes, one cattail can spawn many, many more in a small area. The rhizomes are not harmed by fire, so it is ideally suited to the native grassland environments where it thrives as one of the first species to emerge after a disturbance.

The Bulrush is a Food for All Seasons

Cattails are an incredibly versatile plant in the kitchen. Nearly all parts of the plant are edible. The roots can be harvested throughout the late fall and into the spring. The bottoms of the new leaves can be eaten raw or cooked, and the developing flower spike is eaten like corn on the cob.

Cattail is a Useful Household Plant in Many Cultures

Cattails are nearly ubiquitous as a water plant in countries around the world. The strong leaves have been used in homes for making baskets, rope, and paper. The leaves can also be used as bedding. Oddly enough, the pollen of the bulrush can be used both as a thickener for soup and as an ingredient in fireworks.

Use Cattails to Attract Wildlife to the Pond Garden

In the larger pond or marsh garden, cattails can provide a place for animals to hide and nest. While the dense thickets of cattails are not always a favorite home for ducks, blackbirds and wrens find them to be a suitable home.

Types of Cattails

The easiest cattail to find and grow is Typha latifolia, also known as the Common Cattail. Those with smaller spaces might enjoy the miniature cattail, Typha minima. The narrowleaf cattail (Typha augustifolia) is also slightly shorter than the Common Cattail.

A waving mass of rushes is a calming and beautiful sight in a pond garden. Cattails are gorgeous, but they are also an incredibly useful and versatile plant. Whether grown for food, crafts, or foliage, the cattail is a common wild plant that finds a place of honor in the cultivated water garden.


The copyright of the article The Hardy Cattail in Natural Pond/River Gardens is owned by Tricia Edgar. Permission to republish The Hardy Cattail in print or online must be granted by the author in writing.


Cattail, or Bulrush, irum
       


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Comments
May 24, 2009 6:58 AM
Guest :
Thanks for helping raise cattail consiousness. This marvelous plant is also an excellent fuel plant, has vauable fiber, and can be used to remove toxic chemicals from soil or water. It is also the shock army of the desert, a dessication machine bent on world conquest, and making headway. Look at Africa's Lake Chad. Thousands of square miles choked with Typha Australis, a cattail designed for long droughts. It has a very large underground rhizome compared to its cousins here. Its clearance (near eradication) from the infested areas would restore river and lake functionality, underground aquifers and the "lake effect" rains that used to grace the area. Environmental side effects would include reduced flooding and malaria. It is a part of desertification nearly everywhere it is happening, from our dustbowl to the Tibetan highlands. In Australia, it is called Cumbungi, and is part of their desertification.

It can only be controlled through profitable use. It will be back, so you have to have good reason to be. There are so many profits to be had! Thanks again for helping raise cattail consciousness.
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