Wet areas in your garden offer a unique opportunity to create lush, natural landscapes using NZ native plants for wet areas. Whether you have a boggy spot, a streamside garden, or simply want to boost biodiversity, the right native species will thrive and enhance your outdoor space. Not only do these plants tolerate moisture, but they also help filter water, reduce erosion, and provide habitat for local wildlife. Choosing New Zealand natives means low maintenance, stunning foliage, and gardens that look great year-round, even in damp conditions.

Baumea articulata, commonly known as the Jointed Twig Rush, is an attractive, NZ native grass grown for its aesthetics and ability to handle and colonise extremely wet soils. It forms a dense sward as it grows to 1.5 m tall, which provides an excellent habitat for frogs and water birds. New leaves emerge light green, then age to dark green, and are complemented by brown flower heads throughout the summer. Baumea articulata will happily grow in fresh, standing water (e.g., dams, swamps, creeks, and drainage areas) up to 1 m deep. This is a favoured plant among landscape designers constructing wetland areas.
From $18.83

Ficinia nodosa, commonly known as Knobby Club Rush, is a NZ native grass that features stout, mid-green foliage. In cold or exposed climates, the foliage often takes on bronze tones. Light brown flower heads are borne among the foliage in summer, adding additional interest to this plant. It typically grows to 70 cm tall and 1 m wide, but will colonise a larger area over time with its spreading roots. Ficinia nodosa is ideal for planting in wet areas, particularly in coastal plantings, and can be used in mixed plantings or borders, or mass-planted as a groundcover or on a bank.
From $13.43
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