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| So last year i began gardening, and I successfully planted a bunch of shrubs that lasted through the summer and winter, and have bloomed again this spring. Yay me! Now I am looking at planting more flowers. However, I have made one discovery about myself in the past year: I'm a bigger control freak than I thought, and I don't like it when my plants spread without my express permission! Case in point: I also put down some Sweet Woodruff under a larger shrub just to fill in the space and cover the bottom a bit. I knew that it was a groundcover and would spread, but I never expected that i would react so negatively to it. I see how the centers get so kind of ragged and will need to be uprooted and divided, which is a turn off for me. It's also growing at all sorts of points though the mulch and so I'm really unsure how the mulch should be arranged to handle a spreading plant like this while still providing cover for nearby shrubs. So basically what i am looking for is this: nice, colorful flowers that can grow for a few years and not worry about them spreading all over the place. Ones that either bloom for a long time or can be easily deadheaded to get some reblooms. Oh, and that won't need digging out and dividing. Are there perennials that fit this bill, or should I be looking at annuals instead? I would think annuals fit more of what I need, but I would prefer to have to replant only every couple of years instead of every year. Thanks! |
Follow-Up Postings:
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- Posted by steve1young 7 (My Page) on Wed, May 8, 13 at 14:35
| Hello, I would suggest that you repost and title your message something like, 'Suggestion for Plants that are Well-Behaved'. You may get more hits. You may also want to do a search on this site: Well Behaved Best of luck! |
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- Posted by mad_gallica Z5 Eastern NY (My Page) on Wed, May 8, 13 at 14:53
| Get yourself to the local library, and tell them you want to read a copy of The Well-Tended Perennial Garden by Tracy DiSabato-Aust. There are descriptions of many perennials describing the amount and type of care they need. Poorly behaved spreaders are high on her hate list, so it should be quite helpful. |
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- Posted by gardenweed_z6a N CT (My Page) on Wed, May 8, 13 at 19:05
| Another valuable resource for planting the right thing in the right place the first time out is 'Perennials for Every Purpose' by Larry Hodgson. It describes hundreds of perennials in a lot of detail--far more information than you'll find in nurseries, nursery catalogs or on plant tags. Good luck! |
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| Thanks for the suggestions. Even simply knowing the common terminology like "well-behaved" will be a big help in checking resources. |
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| Noooo, don't say unkind things about sweet woodruff! When it comes to groundcovers, the closest to "well-behaved" is "won't strangle your other perennials & you don't need a flamethrower to control it". Sweet woodruff is positively demure for a groundcover. If you don't like sweet woodruff you may want to reconsider & switch to mulch. |
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- Posted by buyorsell888 Zone 8 Portland OR (My Page) on Sat, May 11, 13 at 20:31
| It is a thug in my Pacific Northwest garden and I'd never advise anyone to plant it. I've been trying to dig it out for years. |
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