Easy Gardens

Ground control

The solutions you need!

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As well as adding interest in otherwise empty spaces, groundhugg­ing plants do the best job of keeping weeds at bay – especially in areas where lawn isn’t an option. There are plenty of suitable plants to choose from, but before you rush out to buy those labelled ‘ground cover’ at the garden centre, you need to assess your site and soil. Plants that will thrive in the dry shade beneath trees won’t take well to a damp patch or a hot spot.

It’s all about finding the right plant for the right place.

For problem soil

Lady’s mantle or Alchemilla is a tough plant, and ideal for problem areas. It is droughtres­istant and tolerates all soil types, including chalk, and can be grown in full sun or partial shade. Another positive is that this attractive herbaceous plant is good grower and self-seeds everywhere, spreading rapidly to produce ground-hugging clumps of light-green foliage and frothy sprays of tiny greenyello­w summer flowers that don’t give weeds a look-in!

For colour

Hardy geraniums provide enduring summer colour you can’t beat.

The variety ‘Johnson’s Blue’ is one of the best weed suppressor­s as it produces dense clumps with finely divided leaves and violet-blue flowers up to 5cm across from mid-summer until the frosts. It will do a good job in well-draining soil in sun or partial shade, and if you cut it back hard immediatel­y after flowering, it will regrow and produce some late blooms. In the autumn, the foliage also takes on brilliant orange and red tones, extending the plants’ seasonal interest even further.

For light in dark areas

The dead-nettles Lamium ‘White Nancy’ and ‘Beacon Silver’ have the shiniest silvery leaves, so are especially useful for lightening up shady spots. Mulching around these sprawling plants in spring will encourage them to fix loose stems into the soil with tiny roots – with the result that they create a tight-knit, ground-hugging mat that will also help trap moisture in the soil.

▲ For pretty foliage

Also known as coral bells, Heuchera begins blooming in early June and doesn’t stop until the end of August. It’s the foliage, however, that makes Heuchera such a winner. Purple, black, red, orange, brown, silver, chartreuse... you can find a Heuchera in almost any colour imaginable. Dark-leaved varieties look especially good with silver-leaved plants like artemisia, blue fescue grasses and groundhugg­ing Lysimachia nummularia ‘Aurea’, which has beautiful, rich golden leaves that creep across the soil.

▲ For quick results

Bugle or Ajuga reptans is an easy-going ground cover favourite that’s fairly quick to establish into a dense evergreen mat, spreading aggressive­ly by runners and creeping into every nook and cranny. It will grow in sun or partial shade and is not fussy about soil so long as the drainage is good. The plants flower in early summer, producing rabbit-proof blooms on short spikes that are often blue to purple and rising about 25cm or so above foliage. The leaves can be an attractive­ly blotched coppery colour, which is sometimes described in plant catalogues as ‘chocolate brown’, or purplish as well as green.

▲ For a bold statement

Another plant that will make a statement is Bergenia or elephant’s ears, which is valued for its bold, architectu­ral foliage, which often turns shades of maroon, crimson and bronze in winter. The enormous leaves play second fiddle, though, when clusters of tiny pale pink, white, ruby red or dark purple bell-shaped blooms emerge on spikes up to 30cm tall in April and May. These plants appreciate good soil, growing happily in shade or sun as long as the soil is not too dry.

Plant them 30 – 45cm apart and plants will soon cover every spare inch of ground, keeping weeds at bay.

For slopes

St John’s wort or Hypericum calycinum spreads via undergroun­d stems (rhizomes), sending up new plants that allow an untamed specimen the chance to run amok through borders. It’s still worth considerin­g if you want to cover a slope that’s tricky to mow or any other area that needs to be protected from erosion. The variety ‘Hidcote’ is the most popular, producing a semi-evergreen mound, which from June to September almost disappears under a cloak of large saucer-shaped, golden-yellow flowers.

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? ‘Johnson’s Blue’
‘Johnson’s Blue’
 ??  ?? Blue fescue (Festuca cinerea)
Heuchera
Blue fescue (Festuca cinerea) Heuchera
 ??  ?? Bugle
Bugle
 ??  ?? St John’s wort
St John’s wort
 ??  ?? Bergenia
Bergenia
 ??  ?? Lamium ‘Beacon Silver’
Lamium ‘Beacon Silver’

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