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This fern is a bold and beautiful choice for shady borders and woodland gardens. A dwarf-growing fern, young papery fronds display coppery-red color maturing deep green and deeply cut. Spreads by underground stems to 15 inches wide. Herbaceous.
Cinnamon ferns appear similar to ostrich ferns but with some distinct differences. The crosiers (young, emerging fiddlehead) are white and woolly, and it has a much larger, fertile "cinnamon stick". It also spreads slowly, unlike the rampant ostrich fern.
The leathery leaves of this sturdy east coast native are evergreen and form a tidy clump that will not spread. Once established it can tolerate periods of drought.
The Japanese Painted fern has a dramatic high-contrast color and is a stand-out against darker greens of the shade garden. Each frond bears darker blue-green central rib that fades to silver variegation at the edges.
Ostrich has semi-rigid fronds which can reach a length of 4 feet and 10 inches in width. Vivid, bright grass green color turns to yellow in late fall. Perfectly suited to natural woodland or use for shaded foundation planting.
The Royal has unique broad leaf fronds and are lush and interesting with prominent cane-like stems. Cinnamon-colored spore clusters at the tips of leaf stems. Prefers more light than most ferns, and will stand full sun in moist coastal conditions.