Plants perennial; not rhizomatous. Culms 50-110(145) cm, erect to spreading; nodes (3)4-5(6), usually glabrous, sometimes pubescent; internodes usually glabrous. Basal sheaths often retrorsely pilose; culm sheaths glabrous, often
tufted-pilose near the auricle position, midrib of the culm leaves not abruptly
narrowed just below the collar; auricles
absent; ligules 0.4-2 mm, glabrous, rounded,
erose, ciliolate; blades 10-35 cm
long, 3-12 mm wide, flat, glabrous. Panicles
10-20(25) cm, open, nodding; branches
ascending to spreading or drooping, filiform. Spikelets 15-25(40) mm, elliptic to lanceolate, terete to
moderately laterally compressed, with (4)6-10(15) florets. Glumes usually glabrous, sometimes pubescent; lower glumes 7.5-12.5 mm, 1(3)-veined; upper glumes 8.9-11.3 mm, 3-veined, often mucronate; lemmas 9-14(16) mm, elliptic, rounded
over the midvein, margins more or less densely pilose on the lower 1/2 or 3/4,
lower lemmas in a spikelet glabrous across the back, uppermost lemmas with
appressed hairs on the back, apices obtuse, entire; awns (2)3-5 mm, straight, arising less than 1.5 mm below the lemma
apices; anthers 1.6-2.7 mm. 2n = 28.
Bromus richardsonii grows in meadows and open woods in the upper
montane and subalpine zones, at about 2000-4000 m in the southern Rocky
Mountains, and at lower elevations northwards. Its range extends from southern
Alaska to southern California and northern Baja California, Mexico; it is found
as far east as Saskatchewan, South Dakota, and western Texas. Specimens with
pubsecent nodes and glumes are apparently confined to the southwestern United
States.