From an 18-24” tall basal tuft of coarse, narrow, linear, sword-shaped, evergreen to semi-evergreen, bluish-green leaves (to 3′ long and 1″ wide) rise one or more thick, leafless flower scapes (no support needed) which soar well above the foliage clump to 3-4′ tall. Each scape is topped with a dense, showy, bottlebrush-like spike (scapose terminal raceme to 6-10″ long) of drooping, short-stalked, tubular flowers which bloom in summer (July-August). Buds and emerging flowers are coral red but mature to yellow (bottom to top), giving each spike a two-toned appearance. Flowers bloom in summer (July-August). Common names refer to the purported resemblance of each flower spike to a red hot poker or torch.
- You cannot add "Korean Feather Reed Grass" to the cart because the product is out of stock.

