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GARY 09-06-2007 07:07 PM

Recommended groundcovers
 
What attractive, flowering groundcovers that grow no taller than
6" (under 3" would be best) would you recommend that will grow well
under these conditions:

I live in Riverside, California (about 60 miles east of Los Angeles).
I'm in USDA Zone 8b or Sunset Zone 19.

The summer high-temperatures may get up to 115 degrees
The winter low-temperatures may get down to 15 degrees.

One-third of my garden is partly-shaded by a deciduous tree from March
through December but the rest of my garden is in full-sun.


beecrofter 09-06-2007 07:58 PM

Recommended groundcovers
 
On Jun 9, 2:07 pm, gary wrote:
What attractive, flowering groundcovers that grow no taller than
6" (under 3" would be best) would you recommend that will grow well
under these conditions:

I live in Riverside, California (about 60 miles east of Los Angeles).
I'm in USDA Zone 8b or Sunset Zone 19.

The summer high-temperatures may get up to 115 degrees
The winter low-temperatures may get down to 15 degrees.

One-third of my garden is partly-shaded by a deciduous tree from March
through December but the rest of my garden is in full-sun.


Look into brass buttons


Carl 1 Lucky Texan 09-06-2007 10:25 PM

Recommended groundcovers
 
gary wrote:
What attractive, flowering groundcovers that grow no taller than
6" (under 3" would be best) would you recommend that will grow well
under these conditions:

I live in Riverside, California (about 60 miles east of Los Angeles).
I'm in USDA Zone 8b or Sunset Zone 19.

The summer high-temperatures may get up to 115 degrees
The winter low-temperatures may get down to 15 degrees.

One-third of my garden is partly-shaded by a deciduous tree from March
through December but the rest of my garden is in full-sun.


put lamium, vinca minor and ajuga on the list of possibilities




Carl

--
to reply, change ( .not) to ( .net)

William Wagner 09-06-2007 10:40 PM

Recommended groundcovers
 
In article ,
Carl 1 Lucky Texan wrote:

gary wrote:
What attractive, flowering groundcovers that grow no taller than
6" (under 3" would be best) would you recommend that will grow well
under these conditions:

I live in Riverside, California (about 60 miles east of Los Angeles).
I'm in USDA Zone 8b or Sunset Zone 19.

The summer high-temperatures may get up to 115 degrees
The winter low-temperatures may get down to 15 degrees.

One-third of my garden is partly-shaded by a deciduous tree from March
through December but the rest of my garden is in full-sun.


put lamium, vinca minor and ajuga on the list of possibilities




Carl


Make sure you like ajuga.

We can't get rid of it.

Bill

--

S Jersey USA Zone 5 Shade
http://www.ocutech.com/ High tech Vison aid
This article is posted under fair use rules in accordance with
Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107, and is strictly for the educational
and informative purposes. This material is distributed without profit.

David E. Ross 10-06-2007 12:56 AM

Recommended groundcovers
 
gary wrote:
What attractive, flowering groundcovers that grow no taller than
6" (under 3" would be best) would you recommend that will grow well
under these conditions:

I live in Riverside, California (about 60 miles east of Los Angeles).
I'm in USDA Zone 8b or Sunset Zone 19.

The summer high-temperatures may get up to 115 degrees
The winter low-temperatures may get down to 15 degrees.

One-third of my garden is partly-shaded by a deciduous tree from March
through December but the rest of my garden is in full-sun.


Cinquefoil (Potentilla neumanniana): This grows quite close to the
ground. It has yellow flowers about the diameter of a nickle, on and
off from spring until frost.

Pink clover (Persicaria capitata): This is NOT really a clover. Its
flowers resemble white clover, but they're pink. This also blooms from
spring until frost (and even into frost if it's light). It creates a
mat about about 4 inches thick. In the winter, the foliage turns red.

I have both of these together in the same beds in back. In front, I'm
using pink clover in place of grass for the main part of the front lawn.
I've tried the cinquefoil in the parkway in front, but it doesn't seem
to thrive. In back, it grows like a weed.

Look up both in Sunset's "Western Garden Book".

--
David E. Ross
Climate: California Mediterranean
Sunset Zone: 21 -- interior Santa Monica Mountains with some ocean
influence (USDA 10a, very close to Sunset Zone 19)
Gardening pages at http://www.rossde.com/garden/

John McGaw 10-06-2007 10:37 PM

Recommended groundcovers
 
gary wrote:
What attractive, flowering groundcovers that grow no taller than
6" (under 3" would be best) would you recommend that will grow well
under these conditions:

I live in Riverside, California (about 60 miles east of Los Angeles).
I'm in USDA Zone 8b or Sunset Zone 19.

The summer high-temperatures may get up to 115 degrees
The winter low-temperatures may get down to 15 degrees.

One-third of my garden is partly-shaded by a deciduous tree from March
through December but the rest of my garden is in full-sun.


You could always fall back on that old CALTRANS standby of Carpobrotus
edulis or Ice Plant. It grew very well along the freeway ramps all the
way up to at least San Jose. Grows _too_ well in fact since it seems to
have become an invasive species but if you could manage to keep yours
under control it was always a fine ground cover especially where water
shortage was a concern. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ice_plant

--
John McGaw
[Knoxville, TN, USA]
http://johnmcgaw.com

John McWilliams 11-06-2007 05:54 AM

Recommended groundcovers
 
John McGaw wrote:
gary wrote:
What attractive, flowering groundcovers that grow no taller than
6" (under 3" would be best) would you recommend that will grow well
under these conditions:

I live in Riverside, California (about 60 miles east of Los Angeles).
I'm in USDA Zone 8b or Sunset Zone 19.

The summer high-temperatures may get up to 115 degrees
The winter low-temperatures may get down to 15 degrees.

One-third of my garden is partly-shaded by a deciduous tree from March
through December but the rest of my garden is in full-sun.


You could always fall back on that old CALTRANS standby of Carpobrotus
edulis or Ice Plant.


Ah. I thought it was crapobotus.

It grew very well along the freeway ramps all the
way up to at least San Jose. Grows _too_ well in fact since it seems to
have become an invasive species but if you could manage to keep yours
under control it was always a fine ground cover especially where water
shortage was a concern. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ice_plant


It got way N. of San Jose. It was a problem to remove it at Crissy Field
[SF] during its restoration ca. 10 years ago.

You may deduce I loathe it.

--
john mcwilliams


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