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Blue Fescue

Festuca glauca
Also known as: Blue Fescue

Blue Fescue is a flower in the Poaceae family. It grows best in full sun with dry to medium moisture, and is listed for USDA zones 4-8. Plants reach maturity about 63–70 days after planting and sit about 6 inches apart.

Varieties

1 from True Leaf Market · sorted by days to maturity
  • Festina (Pelleted)63–70 days

    Non-GMO

    63-70 Days to maturity. Festuca glauca. Festuca Grass Festina Seeds. Non-GMO, Perennial. Open Pollinated. Ornamental. Festina Festuca seeds are a simple and hardy grow ideal for many hot and arid gardens. Festina blue fescue seeds promise 14-18 inch tall grassy clumps of silvery green blades perfect for highlighting walkways, borders, fences, or patios. Festuca (blue fescue) is native to most of the world's climates and is sure to perform well in a number of North American gardens. Festina Festuca seeds mix well with lavender, Lamb's Ear, and plectranthus for a variety of bluish and silvery greens. Pelleted Seeds.

    View on True Leaf Market
Family
Poaceae
Category
Flower
Form
Grass
Lifecycle
perennial
Zone
4-8
Height
Spread
0.8333333333333333–1 ft
Sun
Full sun

Plant spacing

4 plants per square footSquare-foot planting diagram: a 1-foot square divided into a 2-by-2 grid holding 4 blue fescue plants spaced 6 inches apart.
4 plants per square foot

In a square-foot bed, space blue fescue about 6 in apart — that fits 4 plants in each 1-foot square (2×2). Wider rows or containers space the same.

Water
Dry to medium

Plan your blue fescue planting

Add blue fescue to a free GardenDraft plan and get sow, transplant, and harvest dates computed for your ZIP code — with a drag-and-drop bed layout and reminders when it’s time to plant.

Start your free plan →

At a glance

Days to harvest
63–70 days
From transplant or sow to first harvest
Harvest style
Harvest once
One main harvest
After harvest
Use within days
Quality eases off after peak
Frost tolerance
Hardy · to ~20°F
Lowest temperature the foliage usually survives
Germination
~60%
Typical minimum germination rate

Growing timeline

When to plant and harvest blue fescuePlanting timeline for blue fescue, relative to last frost: start indoors from 8 weeks before last frost to around last frost; grow from around last frost to 9 weeks after last frost; harvest from 9 weeks after last frost to 10 weeks after last frost.Start indoorsGrowLast frostTransplant
Start blue fescue indoors ~8 weeks before transplanting around last frost; first harvest 9 weeks after last frost.
Seed to transplant
42-56 days
Outdoor planting
0 to 7 days vs frost
Propagation
Seed
Schedule anchor
Last Frost

Care & troubleshooting— extension-sourced, with citations

Something looks wrong?

Describe what you see on your blue fescueand we'll rank the likely causes — most likely first, least-invasive fix first.

Corn earworm

Pestmoderate

Symptoms: caterpillars feeding at ear tips; chewed kernels and frass inside husk; damaged silks; worse in later-season plantings

Japanese beetles

Pestmoderate

Symptoms: leaves skeletonized between veins; lacy chewed foliage; metallic green-bronze beetles clustered on plants; feeding worst in warm midsummer sun

Phosphorus deficiency

Deficiencymoderate

Unusual this time of year.

Symptoms: stunted plants with dark dull green leaves; reddish or purplish tint on leaves and undersides; delayed maturity and poor fruiting; symptoms worst in cold spring soils; older leaves affected first

  • CulturalCheck soil test and soil temperaturestrong evidence — extension confidence

    Purpling in cold spring soils is often temporary, since cold roots can't take up phosphorus that's actually present; warm weather usually resolves it, so confirm a true shortage with a soil test before adding phosphorus.

    Source: UMN Extension; Missouri Botanical Garden

  • OrganicAdd phosphorus only if the test calls for itmoderate evidence — extension confidence

    If low phosphorus is confirmed, work a phosphorus source into the root zone per the test recommendation, and keep soil pH in range since extreme pH ties up phosphorus.

    Always follow the product label — it is the law.

    Source: UMN Extension

Wireworms

Pestmoderate

Unusual this time of year.

Symptoms: patchy poor germination; seedlings die in stretches; tunneled holes in potatoes and root crops; hard shiny orange-brown worms in soil; thinning stands after sod or grass

  • CulturalRotate away from grassy groundstrong evidence — extension confidence

    Avoid planting susceptible crops right after sod, pasture, or grass cover, where wireworms build up; rotate to a less-favored crop and let infested beds dry out between plantings.

    Source: UMass Extension: Wireworms; UC IPM: Wireworms

  • CulturalBait-trap to monitor· every 5 days · ~3 wksmoderate evidence — extension confidence

    Bury pieces of carrot or potato or a handful of soaked wheat seed as bait when soil reaches about 50F, check after several days, and remove the worms you find to gauge and reduce pressure.

    Source: UMass Extension: Wireworms

Aphids

Pestlow

Symptoms: clusters of tiny soft-bodied insects on new growth and undersides; sticky honeydew or sooty mold; curled distorted new leaves; ants tending them

  • CulturalBlast off with water· every 3 days · ~2 wksstrong evidence — extension confidence

    Knock colonies off with a strong jet of water in the morning; repeat every few days. Light infestations rarely need more.

    Source: UC IPM: Aphids

  • OrganicInsecticidal soap - label use only· every 1 wk · ~3 wksmoderate evidence — extension confidence

    For persistent colonies apply insecticidal soap to undersides per label. Avoid open flowers.

    Always follow the product label — it is the law.

    Source: UC IPM

Common corn smut

Diseaselow

Symptoms: swollen silvery-white galls on ears, tassels, or stalks; galls darken to a black sooty spore mass; worse after wounding, hail, or heavy nitrogen