Grove of Alata bamboo. Dense, tall screen. Slender canes

Alata

3 Gallon (4'+ tall)
$104.00
Sale price  $104.00 Regular price 
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Grove of Alata bamboo. Dense, tall screen. Slender canes

Alata

Phyllostachys Aureosulcata 'Alata'

$104.00
Sale price  $104.00 Regular price 

Free shipping on every order — no minimum

  • SunSun to Shade
  • Height30 ft
  • Cane Ø2 in
  • Hardy to-5°F
Plant Size
Out of stock

Healthy-arrival guarantee

If your bamboo arrives damaged or unhealthy, we'll make it right with a replacement or refund — backed by 30+ years of growing experience.

Will it grow in my area?

About & Sizing

A great screening bamboo for cold climates. Canes are green and very straight at maturity. About 10% of the canes will have a zigzag in the lower portions of the cane.

Phyllostachys Aureosulcata 'Alata' is very similar to Aureosulcata 'Yellow Groove' but with a solid green cane. It also has zig-zags in about 10% of the canes. This makes for an interesting visual appearance. The curves typically occur in the lower portions of the canes.  The culm (cane) sheaths are pale green with creamy streaks. Auricles and oral setae are present on mid culm, can be absent on lower and upper portions of the culms.

In USDA Climate Zone 7 expect mature size canes to be over 30 feet. in height.

In USDA Climate Zone 6 expect mature size canes to be 15 feet in height.

In USDA Climate Zone 5 expect mature size canes to be 8 to 15 feet in height.

In USDA Climate Zone 4 expect mature size canes to be 8 feet in height.

Phyllostachys Aureosulcata 'Alata' has a very vertical appearance with slightly upswept limbs. It is a very straight bamboo with a low tendency to weep.

This bamboo is also known as Phyllostachys Aureosulcata 'Pekinensis'.

'Alata' can make a very dense and effective screen and its cold hardiness allow it to grow almost anywhere in the United States.

Species
Phyllostachys Aureosulcata 'Alata'
Mature height
30 ft
Mature cane Ø
2″
Sunlight
Sun to Shade
Cold hardiness
-5°F minimum
Type
Running bamboo
Size & Spacing

The plants we ship are starter divisions from established groves — and the larger the size you choose, the bigger its root system and the faster it fills in.

  • For a privacy screen, plant on 5-foot centers or closer. Tighter spacing and a bigger starting size give you a solid wall of green sooner — often in 3–5 years.
  • For a grove or specimen, give each plant space to spread and show its form.
  • Each spring brings taller, thicker canes until the grove reaches mature size. How bamboo grows → · Planting guide →
Alata planting distance on screening bamboo
Care Guide
  • Light. At least 4 hours of filtered sun or more. A few large-leaf dwarf species are happy in partial shade.
  • Water. Keep the soil evenly moist through the first growing season while roots establish. Once established, bamboo is quite drought-tolerant — just never let it sit in standing water.
  • Soil. Not fussy. Neutral pH, well-draining loam with organic matter is ideal, but it grows well in clay too. Roots feed in the top 12″ of soil.
  • Growth. New canes shoot each spring (roughly March–May), reaching full height in about 60 days. The grove fills in noticeably after about three full years.
  • Feeding. A balanced, time-release fertilizer in spring can speed establishment by a year or more.
  • Containing it. Running bamboo spreads by shallow underground rhizomes. Root-prune twice a year, or install Bamboo Shield for a worry-free barrier. How bamboo grows →
Container & Planter Info

Bamboo thrives in large containers with good drainage — perfect for patios, balconies, and defining outdoor spaces.

  • Pick a hardier plant. Containers don't insulate roots the way the ground does. For year-round pots, choose a species rated a zone or two colder than your area.
  • Go big. A larger container means more root room, more insulation, and faster growth. Make sure it has drainage holes.
  • Water more often. Potted plants dry out faster — check soil moisture regularly, especially in summer.
  • Refresh every few years. Top-dress, or divide and repot, once the roots fill the container.
How It Arrives

Your plant ships nursery-fresh from our family-run farm — an established, well-rooted division (never a fresh-dug start), carefully packed to travel safely.

  • On arrival, unbox right away, give it a good drink, and let it settle in a sheltered spot for a few days before planting. Planting instructions →
  • A little leaf drop or yellowing is normal after shipping — bamboo is evergreen and flushes fresh leaves each spring.
  • Healthy-arrival guarantee. If your plant shows up in poor shape, we'll make it right. See our guarantee →
FAQs

Will running bamboo spread?

Yes — that's how it forms a screen. It spreads by shallow rhizomes that are easy to direct with twice-yearly root pruning or a Bamboo Shield barrier.

How fast will it grow?

New canes can grow up to 4 feet a day in spring, and the grove fills in noticeably after about three years. How bamboo grows →

When will it green up after planting?

Some leaf drop after shipping is normal. Bamboo is evergreen and pushes fresh leaves in spring as new shoots emerge.

How far apart should I plant for a screen?

Plant on 5-foot centers or closer for a screen in 3–5 years. Closer spacing fills in faster — you can't over-plant bamboo.

Will it grow in my area?

Use the growing-zone tool in the header (or the "Will it grow here?" panel above) to check this plant against your zone.

From Grove to Garden

Take a behind-the-scenes look at how we grow and ship bamboo at Lewis Bamboo — carefully dug, containerized, watered, grown, and packaged so healthy, ready-to-plant bamboo arrives at your door.

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