Sheep Fescue
Sheep fescue is a short, drought-tolerant bunchgrass. It can be planted in individual clumps like an ornamental grass or seeded as a low-maintenance lawn. It is known for being the most drought-tolerant of all the fine fescues.
Sheep fescue has a more blue color to its leaves than most other lawn grasses. Its thin blades have a graceful, soft appearance. Since it only grows to be about 12 inches tall, it can be mowed occasionally to keep it short, or it can be left to grow tall for a more naturalist look. If left unmowed, its blades will eventually bend over slightly creating a wavy, undulating appearance.
In addition to its drought-tolerance, it can also be planted in areas with partial shade, like under a shade tree. As a cool season grass, it greens up earlier than blue grama and buffalograss. It requires about three-fourths of the water than Kentucky bluegrass requires. Sheep fescue is a great choice for higher elevations, growing up to 13,000 feet.
In the right setting, sheep fescue can be a fantastic choice for a water-saving, low-maintenance lawn.
Sheep Fescue
Sheep fescue is a short, drought-tolerant bunchgrass. It can be planted in individual clumps like an ornamental grass or seeded as a low-maintenance lawn. It is known for being the most drought-tolerant of all the fine fescues.
Sheep fescue has a more blue color to its leaves than most other lawn grasses. Its thin blades have a graceful, soft appearance. Since it only grows to be about 12 inches tall, it can be mowed occasionally to keep it short, or it can be left to grow tall for a more naturalist look. If left unmowed, its blades will eventually bend over slightly creating a wavy, undulating appearance.
In addition to its drought-tolerance, it can also be planted in areas with partial shade, like under a shade tree. As a cool season grass, it greens up earlier than blue grama and buffalograss. It requires about three-fourths of the water than Kentucky bluegrass requires. Sheep fescue is a great choice for higher elevations, growing up to 13,000 feet.
In the right setting, sheep fescue can be a fantastic choice for a water-saving, low-maintenance lawn.
Plant details
Botanic Name
Festuca ovina
Pronunciation
fes-TOO-cuh oh-VEE-nuh
Mature Height
8 to 12 in.
Mature Spread
8 to 12 in.
Water usage
One Droplet: Water twice per month or less, once established.
Two Droplets: Water about once per week, once established.
Three Droplets: Water about twice per week, once established.
Bloom time
NA
Natural Habitat
Europe
Light Requirements
sun to part shade
Cold Hardiness
USDA zone 2-7
Elevation Limit
hardy to 13,000 ft.
Performance
Sheep fescue was planted in 2015 in the lawn of the Foothills Landscape of the Water Wise Neighborhood at the Xeriscape Demonstration Garden. Although we don't have enough information to evaluate its long-term performance, it looks like it's going to be a good grass for a low-maintenance landscape. It has performed well throughout the Colorado Springs area as well.
Maintenance
Mow as needed, or cut back in late winter before new growth begins in spring.
See in a landscape
This corner lot was almost all Kentucky bluegrass before getting a xeric renovation that added water savings and design. The bluegrass was removed and replaced by stone retaining walls that showcase small xeric shrubs, ornamental grasses and flowering perennials. The bluegrass was replaced with a sheep fescue lawn that is mowed only once a year for a native look. Mowing this grass less frequently helps it use even less water by shading the ground and eliminating evaporation loss from cut grass blades. The large medians of this corner lot were re-landscaped to eliminate the bluegrass and add gravel blocks alternating with simple shrub planting beds with drip irrigation. The simple design of this renovation adds Colorado style while decreasing the water and maintenance that bluegrass requires.
This yard was previously all bluegrass and required too much water and maintenance for not a lot of return. While fences and patios can be the more expensive part of a landscape, this home turned unused grass into a fenced-in, gravel patio space that adds function and design. The new grass in this yard is sheep fescue, a well-adapted grass to Colorado, that uses about one-third to one-half less water than Kentucky bluegrass. The grass is mowed only twice a year to give a native look to the design and the ornamental grasses and perennials were chosen for water savings, low maintenance and year-round interest.