Amateur Gardening

Award-winning gardener, author and broadcaste­r, Liz Zorab explains how creeping plants are the gardener’s friends

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If you leave a patch of ground uncovered, nature will fill the gaps with plants. Whether that’s from seeds that have floated through the air and then lain dormant in the soil, or plants spreading themselves across the ground. These are usually wildflower­s, that we might refer to as weeds.

There are two great ways to reduce the likelihood of unwanted weeds germinatin­g all over our gardens. One is to place a layer of organic matter, a mulch, over the soil to block light from the seeds, and the other is to use ground cover plants. These are lowgrowing, spreading plants that blanket the area with leaves and flowers. While they dutifully afford protection to the soil and fill the gaps, below ground their roots help increase microbial activity, enhancing the soil-life and nutrient exchange.

While ground cover plants are establishi­ng, it may be necessary to use a layer of mulch around them to reduce weed growth and add nutrients to the soil. I love using ground cover plants, not just from an aesthetic viewpoint, but mostly because they save me from the task of weeding out the unwanted!

As with so many things, different ground cover plants come in and out of fashion, but I think some are classics, deserving of considerat­ion regardless of current trends in the garden centre. It’s worth experiment­ing with them to see how they grow in different situations in your garden and to find the ones that appeal to you most.

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