Thread: goundcover
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Old 07-06-2005, 11:40 AM
Baine Carruthers
 
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It should perform well. It's very easy to establish.

--
Baine


"Raleighgirl" wrote in message
. com...
Damn, must have had my fingers on the wrong keys! I meant to
say:
Oh yea, I hadn't thought of ajuga. Will it like the dampness?
Thanks for the ideas Baine.
Jenny


"Raleighgirl" wrote in message
m...
| OF yea, I hadn't thought of auger. Will it like the dampness?
| Thanks for the ideas!
| Jenny
| "Baine Carruthers" wrote in message
| ...
| | There are several varieties of ajuga that would work well
| without the
| | "snake-y" look. Chrysogonum may also be a good choice.
| |
| | --
| | Baine
| |
| |
| | "Raleighgirl" wrote in message
| | . com...
| | Hi all.
| | I hope you're having as much fun gardening as I am! I laid
| in a
| | new garden, this time one large enough to include several
| trees.
| | Nice for something different. I think it will take several
| years
| | to fill this one.
| |
| | Anyway, I have a problem area I need help with. We have an
| area
| | (about 10x30), under trees, that stays damp. It's in a
| natural
| | area but I don't want to cover the dampness with mulch.
| | Oftentimes, out here in the "country," many groundcovers
| | (pachysandra, periwinkle) seem snake-y. I tried some of
the
| | plants (forgot the name) with heartshaped, red rimmed
leaves,
| | white flowers and spreads like wildfire; I like it but it's
| too
| | tall. Any ideas?
| |
| | As always, thanks in advance.
| |
| | Raleighgirl
| |
| |
| |
| |
|
|