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Sometimes, despite a gardener's best efforts to improve the soil
and care for the grass, a lawn fails to thrive. Insufficient light is often the cause of the problem.
Other times the location is too hot or steep to keep well watered and fertilized. On such sites a gardener
is well advised to consider low maintenance alternatives to turf grass. The following plants are excellent
choices for difficult locations:
For Shade:
Campanula: Spreads quickly
and is beautiful to behold.
Vinca Minor: Best choice for dry soil; has periwinkle blue flowers
Pachysandra: Spreads quickly through underground
runners but is not invasive; thrives in acid soil
Lily Turf: Ideal for use around ponds and the
edge of streams; best with well drained soil and light feeding.
Baby Tears: An evergreen, emerald-green creeping
ground cover with tiny leaves. It is a soft, velvet-like carpet growing 2.5cm (1") high. This must be
kept moist.
Sword Fern: A tough fern that tolerates some sun
and looks good through winter. This can look more like a shrub than a ground cover
Hosta (hardy cultivars): Lush yet elegant appearance; dozens of
varieties and easy care make hostas a popular choice for shade. This can look more like a shrub than a
ground cover.
For Sun:
Thyme: Thyme is low growing and rugged. It requires
a minimum in watering, loves loose sandy soil and as an added bonus, it blooms. Most low growing varieties,
under 2 inches, take light foot traffic and therefore are great between stepping stones in those sunny
warm areas.
Sedum:This is a large group of hardy and tender
succulent annuals and perennials. Sedums are very easy to propagate as almost any tiny leaf or piece of
stem that touches the ground will root.
Trailing Gazania: 12" high perennial from
South Africa. It is a perennial that flowers in the summer and requires little water.
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