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janp 07-02-2007 02:14 PM

lariape for ground cover
 
This is so basic, but I don't know...I would like to transplant this
beautiful
ground cover (it has dark berries at times) to cover a partially
shaded hill..
...poor soil. Any tips on when the best time of the year is to do
this ?


Cearbhaill 07-02-2007 05:22 PM

lariape for ground cover
 

"janp" wrote in message
ps.com...
This is so basic, but I don't know...I would like to transplant this
beautiful
ground cover (it has dark berries at times) to cover a partially
shaded hill..
..poor soil. Any tips on when the best time of the year is to do
this ?




That depends a whole lot on where *you* are.


--
Toni
South Florida USA
USDA Zone 10
http://www.cearbhaill.com




Jangchub 07-02-2007 07:17 PM

lariape for ground cover
 
On 7 Feb 2007 06:14:23 -0800, "janp" wrote:

This is so basic, but I don't know...I would like to transplant this
beautiful
ground cover (it has dark berries at times) to cover a partially
shaded hill..
..poor soil. Any tips on when the best time of the year is to do
this ?


The plant is Liriope, so do a search on google for tons of info.

told2b 07-02-2007 09:15 PM

lariape for ground cover
 
On Feb 7, 2:17�pm, Jangchub wrote:
On 7 Feb 2007 06:14:23 -0800, "janp" wrote:

This is so basic, but I don't know...I would like to transplant this
beautiful
ground cover (it has dark berries at times) to cover a partially
shaded hill..
..poor soil. *Any tips on when the best time of the year is to do
this ?


The plant is Liriope, so do a search on google for tons of info.


http://www.landscape-pros.com/giantlariape.jpg

Lariape and Liriope are 2 different plants.
HTH


Jangchub 07-02-2007 09:45 PM

lariape for ground cover
 
On 7 Feb 2007 13:15:15 -0800, "told2b" wrote:

On Feb 7, 2:17?pm, Jangchub wrote:
On 7 Feb 2007 06:14:23 -0800, "janp" wrote:

This is so basic, but I don't know...I would like to transplant this
beautiful
ground cover (it has dark berries at times) to cover a partially
shaded hill..
..poor soil.

ny tips on when the best time of the year is to do
this ?


The plant is Liriope, so do a search on google for tons of info.


http://www.landscape-pros.com/giantlariape.jpg

Lariape and Liriope are 2 different plants.
HTH


I don't think so. I think it is being misspelled on the site you
show.

Cearbhaill 08-02-2007 11:08 AM

lariape for ground cover
 

"told2b" wrote in message
The plant is Liriope, so do a search on google for tons of info.


http://www.landscape-pros.com/giantlariape.jpg


Lariape and Liriope are 2 different plants.





Looks like liriope to me.
Variations in spelling are not uncommon.


--
Toni
South Florida USA
USDA Zone 10
http://www.cearbhaill.com




Jangchub 08-02-2007 08:56 PM

lariape for ground cover
 
On Thu, 8 Feb 2007 06:08:20 -0500, "Cearbhaill"
wrote:


"told2b" wrote in message
The plant is Liriope, so do a search on google for tons of info.


http://www.landscape-pros.com/giantlariape.jpg


Lariape and Liriope are 2 different plants.





Looks like liriope to me.
Variations in spelling are not uncommon.


Taxonomy assigns one Latin term to a plant which is spelled the same
way. This different spelling of same plants is what common names are
for.

Cearbhaill 09-02-2007 12:38 AM

lariape for ground cover
 

"Jangchub" wrote in message

Taxonomy assigns one Latin term to a plant which is spelled the same
way. This different spelling of same plants is what common names are
for.



In a perfect world, maybe.
People misspell proper names everyday.

Are you saying it is not Liriope muscari ?


--
Toni
South Florida USA
USDA Zone 10
http://www.cearbhaill.com




Jangchub 09-02-2007 03:07 AM

lariape for ground cover
 
On Thu, 8 Feb 2007 19:38:32 -0500, "Cearbhaill"
wrote:


"Jangchub" wrote in message

Taxonomy assigns one Latin term to a plant which is spelled the same
way. This different spelling of same plants is what common names are
for.



In a perfect world, maybe.
People misspell proper names everyday.

Are you saying it is not Liriope muscari ?


If you look at the entire thread, someone said these were two entirely
different plants. I said, no the website misspelled it and it went on
from there. I don't know if it's L. muscari, I do know it is Liriope,
not Lariape.


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