Cinnamon and Royal Ferns
Cinnamon and royal ferns: Osmunda spp. are common throughout Arkansas and were one of the first ferns that homeowners began finding in garden centers. Royal ferns can grow up to six feet in height, and generate many fronds. In time they form dense colonies of plants, giving a bushlike appearance in the landscape. They will die back completely to the ground in the winter. The cinnamon ferns new fronds emerge covered in a reddish hair, and are called fiddleheads. This is not the edible fiddlehead of commerce–don’t eat the Arkansas natives. As the fronds age, the red hairs drop off, but a few are retained where the little leaflets join the main stem of the leaf. The spore bearing leaves come up first and are quite red in color. The sterile persistent green leaves follow, and are also covered with reddish hairs initially. The spore bearing fronds only last a few weeks, and will wither away, leaving behind the large green bushy leaves.
Sun-Loving Ferns
If you are a fern lover, but don’t have shade, don’t despair. There are sun-loving ferns. It is even possible to grow some of the shade lovers in the sun, but soil preparation and water are crucial to survival. An easy family of ferns to grow is the Lady ferns: Athyrium spp. There are two native species and several hundred cultivars in the trade. They differ by the amount of cutting in the leaves, with colors ranging from reds to greens. Some cultivars are dwarves–no taller than a foot, with other varieties growing upwards of six feet. The southern lady fern is supremely adapted to a wide range of sun and soil characters. They can be quite drought tolerant, after they are established. These plants will grow in both full sun to total shade, but will require more water, and a more organic soil in the sun.
Bracken Fern
Another sun lover. Give it space, for it is aggressive. It will tolerate the shade, but prefers the sun–growing three to four feet in height. It tends to kill out other plant species in its shade, so give it its own space, and let it grow–and more importantly give it room to grow.
Care
As with any group of plants, culture and care will vary by species. Some general guidelines for all ferns: prepare the soil carefully. Loosen the soil and add in well-aged compost or leaf mold. Avoid tight, heavy soils. Have your soil tested, if the pH is below 5.5 add some pelletized lime. Most ferns prefer a soil pH between 6.0 - 7.0. Raised beds make for excellent fern displays but will need extra winter protection – with mulching. Raised beds have lower winter soil temperatures which can be harder on the ferns. Container gardening of these ferns can be difficult both in summer temperatures and winter lows. Wrapping of the pots or using larger containers may help. Container production of hardy ferns should be limited to some of the smaller ferns, which don’t produce as large of a rhizome and root system.
While many of the ferns can be drought tolerant once established, most ferns will benefit from supplemental watering. Ferns appreciate an occasional leaf mold or aged compost supplement, but don’t respond well to commercial fertilizer. For the most part, if proper soil preparation was done, they should do fine on their own.
Ferns prefer to be left alone to multiply–they like benign neglect–and don’t like to be divided on a regular basis. So allow room for them to mature and spread. Division is a method of propagation, but will set back their growth for a year or more.