I love my Nandino! Mine is the old type and they are matinance free! I never was into gardening untill the last 2 years i never fertilized them. Now I do and they are beautiful!! Red berries and some red leaves in fall. I cannot waite to go get the new breeds like you are showing to add to my new garden. I love that they change color when it gets cold!!! Believe me when I tell you that you can't hardly kill one. My two with 0 care when I was young are around 30 years old. I knew nothing of plants and would have never considered getting my hands in the dirt. Now 40 years later I am obsessed with Gardening. Never say never!!!!!🤗 I love my yard like Linda does!! How we change!!!!and it is never to late to start Gardening!😁😁😁 Watch you and Laura every day. Yo u are my Inspiration! Texas
I dont.dare fo out and.look .i get totally.depressed...especially after.getting hit with 7 (century) record cold snow storms IN A ROW.AND ALMOST.DYING...AND.SAVING A NEIGHBOR FROM.FREEZING TO.DEATH!! PLANTS.THAT HAVE BEEN AROUND FOR 40 YEARS DIED..I HAVE ZERO LAND SCAPING...EVEN PLANTS THAT WOULD OF MADE IT THRU TWO.STORMS ..GONE...JUST SOME...SOME NATIVE PLANTS...MADE IT THRU...BIG TREES ARE EVEN IFFY....
Ooooh good idea! Did you start that from seed? I'm having a tough time finding any live annuals and perennials at my local nurseries but it's still early spring so we'll see but there's always TONS of seeds.
I’d that a perennial for Michigan, by any chance? I bought a house with the entire front and back yard bordered with flagstone pieces on top of each other. It’s beautiful, but I want flowers in between the stones. Maybe phlox?
My mother used golden varigated lemon thyme as a groundcover in our little postage stamp of an apartment garden when I was a young child. One of my strongest memories from early childhood is wiggling under the fence to get in or out crushing the lemon thyme as I went! I remember how intense and how intensly bright the scent was as I crawled through it! It is my number 1 favorite ground cover! Ajuga is number 2.
@@LindaVater thank you from the bottom of my heart ❤️..I live alone and stay by myself a lot since Covid and love yard work but with winter here I just love watching your videos..like having a light at the end of a tunnel...or should I say Sunshine..🥰
Ajuga grows in zones 3 to 9 for those inquisitive minds. I had it, but finally gave some away and did away with myself. It grows thick! Planted ferns in place of. I'm so on board with planting Creeping Thyme in pots. Its beautiful! Thanks, Linda 🌱 Looking forward to my favorite time of all .. Spring = New LIFE!!
Lady !!!!! You are my kind of gardener !!!! I pour boiling water too !!! That’s crazy !!! I do it to protect my honey bees. Also - your brick/gravel/stone IS Beautiful ! I have /use Mondo grass instead of boxwoods. No clipping- but you are enticing me to that ...And Ajuga is magnifique - blooms don’t last long enough... but TOTALLY worth it. Foliage is gorgeous. I just love how you use artistically the STRONG performers for southern gardens.
@@LindaVater What you are doing is a fabulous feast for the eyes and really a truly meaningful service to the gardening community. I am mesmerized by your garden. You’ve really taught me to rethink certain shrubs. And definitely boxwoods- which I swore off in 2001.
Kiora Linda ! Hi from New Zealand. I must tell you , i like watching your channel , its clear, simple , easy to listen and to follow . Your garden its beautiful and you are also beautiful lady with very nice voice . Thank you so much
I've found when using Dwarf Mondo grass the pavers need to be placed a little higher than the soil surface to make walking on the pavers comfortable. The mondo tends to be a tripping hazard. But it is beautiful.
My tried and true groundcover is sedum. It comes in so many interesting varieties, but the blue sedum and the bright green one are the most vigorous. It takes full sun with absolutely no problem, and makes beautiful mounds. It's also easy to move or propagate. Just take a handful and throw it on bare dirt. Water it a bit, and it will take hold.
Hello, I'm in Wisconsin, so I personally love hostas as ground covers for easier maintenance areas, so many awesome colors out there, also pachysandra and as an easy care very low growing ground shrub variegated euonomous, also just green variety. I can take a branch from euonomous and dig it into ground and it will start another shrub, however they are not aggressive. Thank you Linda 😊
You make a good point about ground covers not being persistent. Many times, a patch declines because of too much shade overhead, competition with tree or shrub roots, and insects.
I love boiling water weed trick after i learned that..gardening is my therapy. I absolutely love our garden my mom and I worked so hard at. If we ever move I'm taking most of what I planted into the soil because this place was a desert zone prior to what we have made it into. In my humble opinion we have the best and most diverse garden good for the pollinators and birds on the block haha
I’ve planted hens&chicks as a ground cover around a rock ledge on my side flower bed. I started with a handful and since they produce babies, I just keep filling it in. And I’m going to try some herbs as ground cover. I love that idea. Thanks!
I absolutely love potato vine as a ground cover! It grows quickly and easily. It does well in full shade to full sun, and it comes in so many colors! 🌸
Never thought about potato vine for ground cover! I have it right now, just planted but always container. I have a very steep back slope (have to climb it!) that I want to be covered so Hubs doesn't have to mow it. Heavy hardwoods so partial shade as they grow tall. I thought of Vinca, creeping variety, but I think I will try some of the Potato Vine, thanks.
@@commonsense246 GOOD CALL on a slope! I have a small slope in back up to a privacy fence that my dog loves to get muddy barking at the dogs behind us. Thanks! Oh! Isn’t it an annual, though?
Linda, thanks for braving the cold. I use the mondo here in Va. and it's wonderful and it spreads somewhat. Also, I'm glad Stuart is healthy again. Happy February. A. Clark
We love the purple creeping verbenas that just appeared in the garden somehow. Would love to see them spread around. Glad we didn’t pull them out when we first discovered them because they looked like weeds.
Thx for your preferred ground cover info Sherry. I am in Luna County in SW New Mexico, also zone 8a, and looking for plants hardy enough to withstand our 100-115° heat with up to 15 hours of sunlight daily.
Love your #1, it’s mine too! Just over a year ago I planted -by myself-over 6000 bare root pips of dwarf mondo to replace my front lawn. Now I’m working on the backyard. I’ve also had great success with climbing fig as a ground cover.
Thank you for your tips, very informative as always. I often use sweet woodruff. The quickly spreading ground cover is sun and shade friendly. It is not very demanding and adapts readily to any moisture or dry conditions. And the scent is glorious!
Liriope comes in three sizes the full size, mondo grass that is about 5-6inches tall thin leaves and dwarf that is about 1-2inches. I replaced my front lawn with mondo it is green all year looks lush and cushiony has no diseases or pests spreads but can be easily edged once every two year almost no maintenance. To be more economical buy the plant in a quart or gallon size and divide it. The plant is easily divided into very small plugs plant on a six in grid and it will fill in in about 2-3 years. The full size liriope has bloom spires in white or blue. The smaller sizes do not bloom noticeably but will produce the bright blue berries
I am in southern California about 6 miles inland from the ocean and we planted Dymondia margaretae in our front and it has filled in very nicely. Looks very luxurious. Love the dark green leaves with silver/gray undersides and the little yellow flowers that appear in the spring. Will def try the mondo grass. We are redoing our back garden after some construction basically wiped it out and that might be a good filler in some of my beds.
I have found monkey grass to be very invasive and impossible to get rid of once it starts. That is in VA. Now I have moved to NC and it's everywhere in this yard. The previous owner must have loved it and now I have to deal with it again. I did enjoy your video and I do love ajuga.
I’m surprised that Monkey grass hasn’t covered up Texas. I thought it was so great when living in Houston in the 70’s-80’s, but soon learned to regret my choice.
I planted some monkey grass in my border in my front yard 30 years ago. It seeded and the seeds were washed down across my back yard. It’s everywhere in my yard from seeds moving by birds and animals. It’s literally taking over parts of my woods. I don’t recommend monkey grass at all.
I like CERATOSTIGMA (plumbago). Bright green in summer, blue flowers in late summer, then leaves turn bright red. It pretty much disappears over winter.
I love my Mondo Grass. It is a little pricey but spreads quickly, although politely. Every year I buy a couple of small pots and add those to the family. I know it is supposed to like good drainage but I have mine in pretty hard red clay, that I amend as best I can, but its a slow process, yet Mondo seems quite happy.
Ajuga is a great ground cover and does come in many colors but not all varieties are hardy. The most popular now is chocolate chip. I found it did not spread and after two years it was dying back I replaced it with bronze beauty which is spreading and growing vigorously. It is an older variety and better field tested. At the cost its important to buy a good plant that will last.
Here in California, Nandina can be invasive. Also the berries are poisonous to birds. So I am forever cutting off the blossoms and berries. But it is a very tough plant and good for the trouble spots. Thanks Linda for another great video!
Yep. I got rid of my large Nandina for that reason. The berries are harmful to Cedar Waxwings. But I have some smaller ones like what Linda showed. Mine are Firepower and they don't berry and I really love them in the landscape. I also have some mid-sized ones....that I would prefer that I'd never planted...b/c they spread everywhere. :( I loved them for years and years...but at some point they took over poppin up new plant growth all around the plant -- very vigorous. And boy are Nandina HARD to dig up. They grip like no other.
Linda💃💃💃. You are my hero!! You braved the Cold Air to make this inspirational video for us😎😎. Thank you! Thank you! Can’t wait for Spring ( in Pennsylvania)..
After planting my bulbs and garlic, I abandon my garden, now for the first time am trying winter sowing ,so I went to see if the container were still standing, luckily for me I did put some barriers around them
@@gaywizard2000 Oh wow,I consider you a hero! :-) May I ask how you overwinter your plants if any at all and when do you start planting outdoors in the spring? I live in Ohio,former Michigander and I thought it was cold there You definitely have me beat haha. I recently moved and found that the sandy low nutrient soil front and back needs to be heavily amended before I plant anything (big bummer) I'm thinking of making quick raised beds or just container gardening this season but not expecting it to look grand this year. I've been gardening for a few years but still have so very much to learn. Good luck to you and happy gardening,my neighbor to the North 🇨🇦💞🇺🇸
Some trees put off a toxin that may disrupt the ability of your preferred ground cover to grow successfully underneath it. This is espwcially true of walnut trees and juglone. If you are set on a particular ground cover that may be sensitive to the tovins put off by the tree, you can force a compatibility by creating a raised bed for your ground cover with a barrier between the old soil which is permeated with tree toxin and the new soil you bring in for your ground cover and flowers. Once ypu have your new plants growing in the raised bed safely separated from the toxic soil of the tree, keep any tree debris cleared out of your raised bed.
I like the herbs too. A big stone walkway I fussed with for years digging out the weeds and planting different thymes. Now I have them in a regular garden. Along one side with basils when it’s warmer, then onions. Mixing together flowers and vegetables side by side. I’m using cattle panel from tractor supply as a tunnel. Putting chimes hanging from the panels. I drove stakes in each ground side.. of the panels to keep them from walking off. I have my onion sets but haven’t got them in yet.
I usually take the winter off from gardening for a break, but you’ve encouraged me to spend more time in my gardens and will be out working in them today!
Zone 7 Virginia, I use all the ground covers that you mention except I have not tried the Nandinas. All excellent performers in my garden. One that I use that has not been mentioned is the strawberry begonia. For me by far it is the quickest to cover a bare area. And it puts out the sweetest little delicate white blooms in the spring. Loved this video!
+1 for saxifraga strawberry begonia. I’m also z7 in VA. Another ground cover, but more sun, is Asian jasmine (I really like Trachelospermum asiaticum 'Snow Rose')
Absolutely! Hardly takes any effort from me, I only water it if it’s been really dry and try to not mow it, and it seems to do a pretty good job of keeping the creeping Charlie from sneaking under my neighbors fence. The more WI native plants I can find the better!
Very interesting to hear your choices. I am always changing my mind about ground covers and changing them around - so they don't end up covering much ground. I use wood chip mulch to fill in between plants much of the time, replenishing the mulch when it inevitably breaks down. Some of the interesting ground covers that I am using currently, to cover small areas, are Geranium "Icicle", Plectranthus "Nico", Plectranthus Argentatus, Geranium "Rozanne", Trachelospermum jasminoides (plain and variegated) and Asarum "Canadense".
There are more heat tolerant Pachysandras available. The one seen in Northern gardens is Pachysandra terminalis. A variety called “Green Sheen” is more heat tolerant, and grows in USDA zone 9b. A related plant is Allegheny spurge or Pachysandra procumbens. The variety “Angola” was developed at Angola, Louisiana. It also grows in zone 9b. I’ve seen Angola doing well in central Florida.
Hi Linda.Even when you are cold,you are the most glamorus garden ever.Thankyou for your variety of plants and ideas you bring to your channel.I learn something or get new ideas every time.You are amazing
Nandinas are worth their weight in gold they seem to be able to take anything you throw at them. Yours are looking fabulous in your front garden. At present I am trying to source Blue Star Creeper for planting between slate pavers (Isotoma fluviatilis) it takes the hot summers and the cold winters which is what I need for my area.
We certainly have similar plants. I've been in my present garden for 3 years and I'm still learning to adapt to living in the mountains north of Madrid Spain and the adverse weather conditions that comes with it. So there is a lot of experimenting going in the garden this year. Keeps you on your toes!
Newfound favorite: Lyreleaf sage (Salvia lyrata) - native Eastern USA ground cover with hosta-like flowers that native insects love~ It's a good alternative to Ajuga if you find Ajuga to not work well for your goals.
I'm trying coreopsis as groundcover under a River Birch. It had multiplied around a patch of Stella D'Oro daylilies, so I'm moving it to the new shade garden I'm trying. FYI . I'm new at this, and I'm already 80 years old. At this point I'll try lots of things. I love watching Linda. There are so many good sites, but I get so confused, maybe I'll just stick to Linda.
I’ve seen running clubmoss at a local public garden and couldn’t get enough of it. I planted some on a shady bank last year and it’s hanging on through winter. Hoping for the best!
I love Creeping Jenny. (Which may be what you were calling gold wort.). I also love various sedums, creeping raspberry under pecan trees, and - creeping phlox which I have renamed jumping phlox. Beautiful year round. Believe it or not - geraniums- ( cranesbill ) true geraniums are magnificent year round. In dead winter- the foliage is a gorgeous purple & red. You really need a lot of friends to share with or a large garden because it must be divided. Often even.
Im in SC and I too have had great luck with creeping Jenny. The elfin thyme is a bit ehhh, but it’s only had 1 season so far. I love mounding artemisia and lambs ears too!
I’m also in South Carolina Zone 8a very hot and humid. Our yard is clay and rocks. Very hard to dig and plant. Creeping jenny loves it here as well as sedum. They spread everywhere and I usually let them have their way. Also have lots of moss. It is actually taking over a very big part of our back yard. I’m getting older and these require very little maintenance. I have tons of monkey grass and I love it. Just hard work cutting it back. I love your channel (I actually found it thru Garden Answer) and I learn something new every time. You’re very easy to listen to. Thanks for sharing with us.
I would love to have your winter, it was 1 degree F when I woke up! Love the dwarf mondo grass, beautiful texture and effect. I’m glad you talked about using shrubs as a ground cover. Many types of plants are great as ground cover not just low growing herbaceous types.
Great list Linda! In a more humid climate, in addition to ajuga reptans and creeping jenny, there is lamium and pachysandra. Pachysandra being the hardest to yank out if not wanted...
I let out a chuckle when at the beginning before the video your green car crashed into the Christmas tree and all the valentines hearts popped out! Super cute! 💚💞💚💞💚💞
I planted oregano in a flower bed, in front of a rose bush. After 3 years, it has spread and grown 2 feet tall. It is covered in flowers and 5 different types of been go crazy over the flowers.
I use Ajuca in containers that develop a bare spot as the summer progresses. Mine develops a lot of purple and pink colors when it gets sun. I trim it to get cuttings. I rough up the soil then press the cuttings into the soil then water it in. It grows like a beautiful weed and comes up easily when I want to move it aside to plant something else. Some even grow in a rosette form. It is also my favorite spiller in several containers.
Much Mahalos to you Linda. I live on the Big Island of Hawaii. I am obsessed with plants and garden. Enjoy your advice, but most everything grows here. But have to be careful and not do evasive plants. You always give me ideas tho.
Interesting about differences in zones and microclimates. Although dwarf Nandina does well in some areas of my garden, it does not on the area where I want it and though Vinca minor does extremely well, it is a much-loved cover for moccasins and rattlesnakes. Yikes. We just can't have everything we want, where we want it, when we want it. We have too many mosquitoes for monkey grass, so I keep trying to find the appropriate groundcover to my liking.
I panted both ajuga and creeping Jenny late last year (I moved the Jenny from containers where they had been since spring) to the ground. Looking forward to seeing how they do this year.
This is very helpful! I live south of you in Austin Texas and I have 4 large beautiful live oaks, but can’t get grass to grow under them. They are also so messy! The dropping of leaves, acorns and tassels fall and spring. I need something easy to blow all the mess that drops over the dirt and whatever I plant there, to be fuss free for clean up
My favorite ground covers: 1. Sandwort (Arenaria Montana) -- Flowers very heavily in early summer but it only flowers once a year. The greenery is kinda pillowy looking and the plant tolerates heat and sun. It needs some time to establish it's self before people walk on it, but after it establishes it's self, it's pretty rugged. I've seen kids stomp on it, and it seemed ok. 2. Oxalis -- shade loving, this plant doesn't like dryness or heat. Ideally you keep the ground moist, but it can even tolerate bogginess if you over water. This plant does not spread on it's own, but the tubers are extremely easy to propagate. Squirrels like it. 3. Violets -- also shade loving, but tolerates sun and traffic a bit more than Oxalis. 4. alyssum -- this doesn't need more explanation. 5. Chives -- it's edible and bees like it (that said, chive honey is only suitable for bbq. ).
@@kimberlyhight162 I currently live in zone 8b, but I grew up in zone 4, which is where I first encountered Sandwort. If I still lived in Utah, I would not grow oxalis.
I live in Oregon, have towering trees behind my yard which leave little sun able to peak through when in full foliage. Then there are the Pacific Northwest weeds--easily the most prolific that I have ever seen and more of a challenge than I can possibly keep up with (having tried year after year and ultimately have failed)...Because I refuse to use weed killers, I realized that the moss that grows everywhere is both beautiful in its myriad variations as well as in an endless supply!! I have finally started using it as a ground cover to replace the lawn and in some problem areas. I have to say this might be my primary solution. Love your videos, Linda! I have learned so much from you! ps, I did not know that Stuart had COVID. So glad he has recovered!
Oh Ruth! I would love to be able to grow moss like that! I find it quite beautiful… But unfortunately, it does not like our dry climate. That sounds absolutely magical!
@@LindaVater Isn't it! I got the idea after spending a week clearing off loads of moss from my roof before the rains began. The moss is excessively produced due to limited light from the forest behind my yard. I saved most of it in several of my garden baskets (adding a few more to my supply from my local Goodwill after watching your videos) and kept wondering what to do with it all, always loving the variety of textures and color. Then the lightbulb.
I call ajuga a traveling plant. We had ajuga at the base of a pine tree, and over the years it moved out into a ring. The ring got bigger and bigger until it petered out. You can solve this by transplanting some of the ajuga back to its original position.
Violets are amazing ground cover too. I've tried carpet chamomile, which smells delicious, but needs help before it gets established, because vigorous weeds grow through it when it's first introduced
My favorites here in Zone 6 so far with my experimenting is lamium, ajuga, and some perennial and annual alyssum then there is the unkillable bishops weed that has come in from my neighbors yard and it grows anywhere sun, shade, wet, dry it doesn't care.
I like Firewitch dianthus, gray-green mounds that have hot pink flowers in early spring, with some silver mound clumps. I trim the dianthus after blooming and it will bloom again in early fall. It does not transplant well but is easy to add small starts from my local nursery in May in NE Oklahoma. I like ajuga too.
Love using creeping thyme as a groundcover! Surprised you recommend nandina though, as it is on the US list of invasive plants. (And just BTW, listed as toxic to cats & dogs by ASPCA Animal poison center)
But the firepower that I have is not invasive....doesn't fruit. And it's quite like what she showed. However, the mid-sized ones I have do fruit and the regular larger ones, of course, do. And both are what I would def term as invasive. But I'm in Mid TN. Maybe it's different elsewhere.
I just looked it up to check: No, Nandina Firepower is generally not considered invasive. This dwarf cultivar of Nandina domestica is sterile and doesn't produce berries, which reduces the risk of it spreading beyond its intended area.
Great video! How doesn't she have more subscribers??? She is a wealth of knowledge and great ideas That having been said, I've planted scotch moss and thyme intermittently between stones in the back walkway last spring. Hoping they all grow to meet each other this year.
You are so kind! We’ve only been doing this since about last March. I’m so pleased to find it helpful. Yes I adore scotch moss and wish I could grow it more successfully here
@@LindaVater my husband found your channel a little while back. You were a guest on Jim Putnams channel. We just bought our first home and pretty new to this stuff. We planted quite a few things last year but boy we wish we knew what we do now lol Having to relocate things and such since things just aren't having the look we were going for. And of course we didn't plant everything in the right conditions. Do you take any video requests?
We live in OKC and tried many plants on your list, although the heat of the sun was too much or the clay. We're also looking at getting Buffalo grass or clover in the front yard. Thanks for the great information.
Linda, I've just discovered your channel and am enjoying your presentation style and good ideas. I live in southeastern Washington, desert country, but we're also zone 7, with cold winters and very hot dry summers, so your recommendations are especially valuable for our climate.
Golden oregano will grow a foot or more tall in some sites. NEVER let it go to seed; it will be everywhere. Keep it pruned low or put it in a spot that’s quite dry. I have a patch that hugs the ground and is beautiful-it is well behaved because it is thriving on neglect. Anyway, that’s my experience with golden oregano.
Hi Linda! Love your inspiration, thank you! I love in Eastern New Mexico and have accidentally found a plant that can be used in areas ground cover is challenging and that is catmint. Catmint has tolerated our harsh NM weather which is boiling and freezing. I use it around patios etc. It doesn't mind if I forget to water and you can shape it. I prefer the natural round tendency however. Thanks for all your great ideas!
Hi, Linda. Our friend sent your video because we currently have a problem with this very issue. So, thank you. We will view this video several times to make our decision. You are coming from Oklahoma. We lived in Crown Heights for many years and wondered if you are speaking from there, from Nichols Hills, maybe from Tulsa. Thank you, Sandy and Steve Briggs
You can tell she’s well read because of how she speaks and structured her sentences. Also great vocabulary. Love watching her!
Martha Stewart of gardens
I just love listening to Linda. It's like having a friend in the gardening world.
🙏🙏🙏
Agreed! I'd love to go visit and ask her all my gardening questions lol
I love my Nandino! Mine is the old type and they are matinance free! I never was into gardening untill the last 2 years i never fertilized them. Now I do and they are beautiful!! Red berries and some red leaves in fall. I cannot waite to go get the new breeds like you are showing to add to my new garden. I love that they change color when it gets cold!!! Believe me when I tell you that you can't hardly kill one. My two with 0 care when I was young are around 30 years old. I knew nothing of plants and would have never considered getting my hands in the dirt. Now 40 years later I am obsessed with Gardening. Never say never!!!!!🤗 I love my yard like Linda does!! How we change!!!!and it is never to late to start Gardening!😁😁😁 Watch you and Laura every day. Yo u are my Inspiration! Texas
Inspirational! Who else watches Linda and goes out to tweak something in your garden?
Lol!!
Me!
I do! I just found her channel and find it so encouraging!
I dont.dare fo out and.look
.i get totally.depressed...especially after.getting hit with 7 (century) record cold snow storms IN A ROW.AND ALMOST.DYING...AND.SAVING A NEIGHBOR FROM.FREEZING TO.DEATH!!
PLANTS.THAT HAVE BEEN AROUND FOR 40 YEARS DIED..I HAVE ZERO LAND SCAPING...EVEN PLANTS THAT WOULD OF MADE IT THRU TWO.STORMS
..GONE...JUST SOME...SOME NATIVE PLANTS...MADE IT THRU...BIG TREES ARE EVEN IFFY....
🙌🏼🙌🏼🙌🏼🙌🏼 Dangerously true!!!
I have lemon thyme planted between flagstone on a patio so when you step on it you get a lemony fragrance from doing so!
Ooooh good idea! Did you start that from seed?
I'm having a tough time finding any live annuals and perennials at my local nurseries but it's still early spring so we'll see but there's always TONS of seeds.
@@LynnAgain83 - I actually bought a flat of it to fill in the larger gaps in my flagstone and it just kind of migrated through the rest of the patio.
@@jongray4828 Ok,thank you for the info! 💐👩🌾💚
This is brilliant🌟
I’d that a perennial for Michigan, by any chance? I bought a house with the entire front and back yard bordered with flagstone pieces on top of each other. It’s beautiful, but I want flowers in between the stones. Maybe phlox?
My mother used golden varigated lemon thyme as a groundcover in our little postage stamp of an apartment garden when I was a young child. One of my strongest memories from early childhood is wiggling under the fence to get in or out crushing the lemon thyme as I went! I remember how intense and how intensly bright the scent was as I crawled through it! It is my number 1 favorite ground cover! Ajuga is number 2.
I love this happy flashback!
Thank you for taking time to post videos..it really lifts my spirits during these sad times...I
I’m so glad to be of any comfort🙏
@@LindaVater thank you from the bottom of my heart ❤️..I live alone and stay by myself a lot since Covid and love yard work but with winter here I just love watching your videos..like having a light at the end of a tunnel...or should I say Sunshine..🥰
Sweet Woodruff is one of my favorite’s and so fragrant when it blossoms.
I needed this video! Thanks for including both shade-loving and sun-loving plants ... Smiles, Stella
Ajuga grows in zones 3 to 9 for those inquisitive minds. I had it, but finally gave some away and did away with myself. It grows thick! Planted ferns in place of.
I'm so on board with planting Creeping Thyme in pots. Its beautiful! Thanks, Linda 🌱 Looking forward to my favorite time of all .. Spring = New LIFE!!
💯💯💯💯
Lady !!!!! You are my kind of gardener !!!! I pour boiling water too !!! That’s crazy !!! I do it to protect my honey bees. Also - your brick/gravel/stone IS Beautiful ! I have /use Mondo grass instead of boxwoods. No clipping- but you are enticing me to that ...And Ajuga is magnifique - blooms don’t last long enough... but TOTALLY worth it. Foliage is gorgeous. I just love how you use artistically the STRONG performers for southern gardens.
Wish I could use more variety but I try to create beauty with what I know is tough and reliable!
@@LindaVater What you are doing is a fabulous feast for the eyes and really a truly meaningful service to the gardening community. I am mesmerized by your garden. You’ve really taught me to rethink certain shrubs. And definitely boxwoods- which I swore off in 2001.
Kiora Linda ! Hi from New Zealand. I must tell you , i like watching your channel , its clear, simple , easy to listen and to follow . Your garden its beautiful and you are also beautiful lady with very nice voice . Thank you so much
I've found when using Dwarf Mondo grass the pavers need to be placed a little higher than the soil surface to make walking on the pavers comfortable. The mondo tends to be a tripping hazard. But it is beautiful.
Excellent point!
Yes, really important. The older one gets (moi) the less we want to fall in the garden! Thank you! 😘💚👍🏼
My tried and true groundcover is sedum. It comes in so many interesting varieties, but the blue sedum and the bright green one are the most vigorous. It takes full sun with absolutely no problem, and makes beautiful mounds. It's also easy to move or propagate. Just take a handful and throw it on bare dirt. Water it a bit, and it will take hold.
Can I ask what kind of sedum? All the sedum I've seen is semi-tall.
@@graedotsame! I would love the know the variety they’re speaking of.
I love that you can even see your ground covers in winter. I have big shrubs that can’t be seen in winter.
Hello, I'm in Wisconsin, so I personally love hostas as ground covers for easier maintenance areas, so many awesome colors out there, also pachysandra and as an easy care very low growing ground shrub variegated euonomous, also just green variety. I can take a branch from euonomous and dig it into ground and it will start another shrub, however they are not aggressive. Thank you Linda 😊
I like those too! I need more, because I moved and forgot to take some of my hostas, etc. I was moving to a condo, but I’m back in a house.
Love your brick, stone and gravel!
You make a good point about ground covers not being persistent. Many times, a patch declines because of too much shade overhead, competition with tree or shrub roots, and insects.
I love boiling water weed trick after i learned that..gardening is my therapy. I absolutely love our garden my mom and I worked so hard at. If we ever move I'm taking most of what I planted into the soil because this place was a desert zone prior to what we have made it into. In my humble opinion we have the best and most diverse garden good for the pollinators and birds on the block haha
I’ve planted hens&chicks as a ground cover around a rock ledge on my side flower bed. I started with a handful and since they produce babies, I just keep filling it in. And I’m going to try some herbs as ground cover. I love that idea. Thanks!
What zone are you in dear?
@@LindaVater I’m in 6a, northeastern PA
Hens and chicks. Great idea. Im zone 6 too
1. Mondo grass (likes afternoon shade best) cushiony..
2. Ajuga
3. Gravel, brick, stone
4. Low growing Herbs - Thyme, oregano, golden money wort (try Mountain Valley - Organics avail) need good drainage
5. Monkey grass (inexpensive)
6. Shrubs like dwarf nananandina (sp)
Sounds great!!!! Thank you!!!
Black scallop ajuga is absolutely stunning. Highly recommend.
I absolutely love potato vine as a ground cover! It grows quickly and easily. It does well in full shade to full sun, and it comes in so many colors! 🌸
Some places it can take sun....but that bright green...live it..
It's far too invasive -like ivy -birds spread it everywhere and very messy if it should die as in drought.
I love it
Never thought about potato vine for ground cover! I have it right now, just planted but always container. I have a very steep back slope (have to climb it!) that I want to be covered so Hubs doesn't have to mow it. Heavy hardwoods so partial shade as they grow tall. I thought of Vinca, creeping variety, but I think I will try some of the Potato Vine, thanks.
@@commonsense246 GOOD CALL on a slope! I have a small slope in back up to a privacy fence that my dog loves to get muddy barking at the dogs behind us.
Thanks!
Oh! Isn’t it an annual, though?
Linda, thanks for braving the cold. I use the mondo here in Va. and it's wonderful and it spreads somewhat. Also, I'm glad Stuart is healthy again. Happy February. A. Clark
I am so impressed with your creativity brick walkways. Great job, Go Girl!!^❣
We love the purple creeping verbenas that just appeared in the garden somehow. Would love to see them spread around. Glad we didn’t pull them out when we first discovered them because they looked like weeds.
I’m in Texas, zone 8A, and I use creeping fig, which I love
Thx for your preferred ground cover info Sherry. I am in Luna County in SW New Mexico, also zone 8a, and looking for plants hardy enough to withstand our 100-115° heat with up to 15 hours of sunlight daily.
How did it survive our crazy last few winters?
Praise God !!! Finally a solution to grow under my oaks. I’m buying those nandinas. Thank you !!!!
You bet!
Love your #1, it’s mine too! Just over a year ago I planted -by myself-over 6000 bare root pips of dwarf mondo to replace my front lawn. Now I’m working on the backyard. I’ve also had great success with climbing fig as a ground cover.
👏👏👏👏
What month did you plant the mondo? I have some significant clumps I want to split up this way. Suggestions please?
@@kitsutherland6445 I’ve planted them in the fall and in the spring with equal success. I live in zone 7b.
thanks
Thank you for your tips, very informative as always. I often use sweet woodruff. The quickly spreading ground cover is sun and shade friendly. It is not very demanding and adapts readily to any moisture or dry conditions. And the scent is glorious!
How lovely
We have sweet woodruff planted by the former homeowner. I do like the spring scent and am trying to decide if it’s a keeper. 🤔
Liriope comes in three sizes the full size, mondo grass that is about 5-6inches tall thin leaves and dwarf that is about 1-2inches. I replaced my front lawn with mondo it is green all year looks lush and cushiony has no diseases or pests spreads but can be easily edged once every two year almost no maintenance. To be more economical buy the plant in a quart or gallon size and divide it. The plant is easily divided into very small plugs plant on a six in grid and it will fill in in about 2-3 years. The full size liriope has bloom spires in white or blue. The smaller sizes do not bloom noticeably but will produce the bright blue berries
Thank you!!
I am in southern California about 6 miles inland from the ocean and we planted Dymondia margaretae in our front and it has filled in very nicely. Looks very luxurious. Love the dark green leaves with silver/gray undersides and the little yellow flowers that appear in the spring. Will def try the mondo grass. We are redoing our back garden after some construction basically wiped it out and that might be a good filler in some of my beds.
I have found monkey grass to be very invasive and impossible to get rid of once it starts. That is in VA. Now I have moved to NC and it's everywhere in this yard. The previous owner must have loved it and now I have to deal with it again. I did enjoy your video and I do love ajuga.
Oh no!
I’m surprised that Monkey grass hasn’t covered up Texas. I thought it was so great when living in Houston in the 70’s-80’s, but soon learned to regret my choice.
I planted some monkey grass in my border in my front yard 30 years ago. It seeded and the seeds were washed down across my back yard. It’s everywhere in my yard from seeds moving by birds and animals. It’s literally taking over parts of my woods. I don’t recommend monkey grass at all.
I like CERATOSTIGMA (plumbago). Bright green in summer, blue flowers in late summer, then leaves turn bright red. It pretty much disappears over winter.
I love my Mondo Grass. It is a little pricey but spreads quickly, although politely. Every year I buy a couple of small pots and add those to the family. I know it is supposed to like good drainage but I have mine in pretty hard red clay, that I amend as best I can, but its a slow process, yet Mondo seems quite happy.
Fabulous informative ground cover video Linda. I never thought of Dwarf Nandina as a ground cover.
Aguga's other name is bugle weed. In the PNW it's very prolific and wants to grow everywhere and hard to eradicate from my grass! But I love it!
My Nandina are gorgeous right now! Peeking their red heads out of the white snow! Very showy!
Red + white is just wonderful💯
Ajuga is a great ground cover and does come in many colors but not all varieties are hardy. The most popular now is chocolate chip. I found it did not spread and after two years it was dying back I replaced it with bronze beauty which is spreading and growing vigorously. It is an older variety and better field tested. At the cost its important to buy a good plant that will last.
I completely agree👍
Agreed. I purchased ajuga chocolate chip zone 7 last yr and I noticed today it didn't survive our winter
so true on ajuga mine did not come back in the spring
LOVE, when UA-cam sends me fellow OKIES to enjoy and learn from💕
Thank you!
Here in California, Nandina can be invasive. Also the berries are poisonous to birds. So I am forever cutting off the blossoms and berries.
But it is a very tough plant and good for the trouble spots. Thanks Linda for another great video!
Yep. I got rid of my large Nandina for that reason. The berries are harmful to Cedar Waxwings. But I have some smaller ones like what Linda showed. Mine are Firepower and they don't berry and I really love them in the landscape. I also have some mid-sized ones....that I would prefer that I'd never planted...b/c they spread everywhere. :( I loved them for years and years...but at some point they took over poppin up new plant growth all around the plant -- very vigorous. And boy are Nandina HARD to dig up. They grip like no other.
I live in zone 3 and my creeping thyme comes back every year and grows beautifully...
i love your thumbnails they’re always so elegant
Thank you 🙏
Linda💃💃💃. You are my hero!! You braved the Cold Air to make this inspirational video for us😎😎. Thank you! Thank you! Can’t wait for Spring ( in Pennsylvania)..
Soon!
After planting my bulbs and garlic, I abandon my garden, now for the first time am trying winter sowing ,so I went to see if the container were still standing, luckily for me I did put some barriers around them
I live in western Canada, you can't imagine how cold it can get here, are we all your heroes too??? Lol
@@gaywizard2000 Oh wow,I consider you a hero! :-)
May I ask how you overwinter your plants if any at all and when do you start planting outdoors in the spring?
I live in Ohio,former Michigander and I thought it was cold there
You definitely have me beat haha.
I recently moved and found that the sandy low nutrient soil front and back needs to be heavily amended before I plant anything (big bummer)
I'm thinking of making quick raised beds or just container gardening this season but not expecting it to look grand this year.
I've been gardening for a few years but still have so very much to learn.
Good luck to you and happy gardening,my neighbor to the North 🇨🇦💞🇺🇸
Some trees put off a toxin that may disrupt the ability of your preferred ground cover to grow successfully underneath it. This is espwcially true of walnut trees and juglone. If you are set on a particular ground cover that may be sensitive to the tovins put off by the tree, you can force a compatibility by creating a raised bed for your ground cover with a barrier between the old soil which is permeated with tree toxin and the new soil you bring in for your ground cover and flowers. Once ypu have your new plants growing in the raised bed safely separated from the toxic soil of the tree, keep any tree debris cleared out of your raised bed.
She literally has to be the coolest “chick” on the block! 🙏🏽thanks for the info Mrs LV
Hardly but thanks Anna☺️
I’m using all types of sedums which are awesome!
I like the herbs too. A big stone walkway I fussed with for years digging out the weeds and planting different thymes. Now I have them in a regular garden. Along one side with basils when it’s warmer, then onions. Mixing together flowers and vegetables side by side. I’m using cattle panel from tractor supply as a tunnel. Putting chimes hanging from the panels. I drove stakes in each ground side.. of the panels to keep them from walking off. I have my onion sets but haven’t got them in yet.
I usually take the winter off from gardening for a break, but you’ve encouraged me to spend more time in my gardens and will be out working in them today!
Go for it!
Same here!!
Love the idea of using Nana Nandina! The color is so pretty and contrast to the green around them. I use the dwarf mondo and it always looks great.
So true👍
Zone 7 Virginia, I use all the ground covers that you mention except I have not tried the Nandinas. All excellent performers in my garden. One that I use that has not been mentioned is the strawberry begonia. For me by far it is the quickest to cover a bare area. And it puts out the sweetest little delicate white blooms in the spring. Loved this video!
+1 for saxifraga strawberry begonia. I’m also z7 in VA. Another ground cover, but more sun, is Asian jasmine (I really like
Trachelospermum asiaticum 'Snow Rose')
VA here, too. Nandina has been great for me in areas where other things constantly die.
I decided to give up pulling out wild strawberries- and decided, "Hey, Ground Cover"!!!!! and its free 😂
Absolutely! Hardly takes any effort from me, I only water it if it’s been really dry and try to not mow it, and it seems to do a pretty good job of keeping the creeping Charlie from sneaking under my neighbors fence. The more WI native plants I can find the better!
I feel the same way about wild violet.
I know whatchamean ;-)
Very interesting to hear your choices. I am always changing my mind about ground covers and changing them around - so they don't end up covering much ground. I use wood chip mulch to fill in between plants much of the time, replenishing the mulch when it inevitably breaks down. Some of the interesting ground covers that I am using currently, to cover small areas, are Geranium "Icicle", Plectranthus "Nico", Plectranthus Argentatus, Geranium "Rozanne", Trachelospermum jasminoides (plain and variegated) and Asarum "Canadense".
I wish I had your winter ! Thanks for the tour and info.
There are more heat tolerant Pachysandras available. The one seen in Northern gardens is Pachysandra terminalis. A variety called “Green Sheen” is more heat tolerant, and grows in USDA zone 9b. A related plant is Allegheny spurge or Pachysandra procumbens. The variety “Angola” was developed at Angola, Louisiana. It also grows in zone 9b. I’ve seen Angola doing well in central Florida.
Hi Linda.Even when you are cold,you are the most glamorus garden ever.Thankyou for your variety of plants and ideas you bring to your channel.I learn something or get new ideas every time.You are amazing
You’re so kind Yvonne:)
Nandinas are worth their weight in gold they seem to be able to take anything you throw at them. Yours are looking fabulous in your front garden. At present I am trying to source Blue Star Creeper for planting between slate pavers (Isotoma fluviatilis) it takes the hot summers and the cold winters which is what I need for my area.
Sounds like our conditions are similar!
We certainly have similar plants. I've been in my present garden for 3 years and I'm still learning to adapt to living in the mountains north of Madrid Spain and the adverse weather conditions that comes with it. So there is a lot of experimenting going in the garden this year. Keeps you on your toes!
Newfound favorite: Lyreleaf sage (Salvia lyrata) - native Eastern USA ground cover with hosta-like flowers that native insects love~
It's a good alternative to Ajuga if you find Ajuga to not work well for your goals.
I'm trying coreopsis as groundcover under a River Birch. It had multiplied around a patch of Stella D'Oro daylilies, so I'm moving it to the new shade garden I'm trying. FYI . I'm new at this, and I'm already 80 years old. At this point I'll try lots of things. I love watching Linda. There are so many good sites, but I get so confused, maybe I'll just stick to Linda.
In gardening years you are still a youngster!
I’ve seen running clubmoss at a local public garden and couldn’t get enough of it. I planted some on a shady bank last year and it’s hanging on through winter. Hoping for the best!
🙏🙏🙏🤞🤞🤞😽
I love Creeping Jenny. (Which may be what you were calling gold wort.). I also love various sedums, creeping raspberry under pecan trees, and - creeping phlox which I have renamed jumping phlox. Beautiful year round. Believe it or not - geraniums- ( cranesbill ) true geraniums are magnificent year round. In dead winter- the foliage is a gorgeous purple & red. You really need a lot of friends to share with or a large garden because it must be divided. Often even.
How funny because I have had trouble getting it established. Gardening is so interesting!
Im in SC and I too have had great luck with creeping Jenny. The elfin thyme is a bit ehhh, but it’s only had 1 season so far. I love mounding artemisia and lambs ears too!
I’m also in South Carolina Zone 8a very hot and humid. Our yard is clay and rocks. Very hard to dig and plant. Creeping jenny loves it here as well as sedum. They spread everywhere and I usually let them have their way. Also have lots of moss. It is actually taking over a very big part of our back yard. I’m getting older and these require very little maintenance. I have tons of monkey grass and I love it. Just hard work cutting it back. I love your channel (I actually found it thru Garden Answer) and I learn something new every time. You’re very easy to listen to. Thanks for sharing with us.
I would love to have your winter, it was 1 degree F when I woke up! Love the dwarf mondo grass, beautiful texture and effect. I’m glad you talked about using shrubs as a ground cover. Many types of plants are great as ground cover not just low growing herbaceous types.
Brrrrrr Jane!
Thank you. I thought my bugle weed was a weed! I decided I’d let it be because it’s lovely. So good to know
Great list Linda! In a more humid climate, in addition to ajuga reptans and creeping jenny, there is lamium and pachysandra. Pachysandra being the hardest to yank out if not wanted...
Creeping Jenny!
I’ve been trying to get rid of pachysandra for 30 years!
I let out a chuckle when at the beginning before the video your green car crashed into the Christmas tree and all the valentines hearts popped out! Super cute!
💚💞💚💞💚💞
Stewart is so clever!
I have a lemon thyme lawn and it is amazing and the honey bees love it.
I am going to try herbs for ground cover. Thank you for the idea.
I planted oregano in a flower bed, in front of a rose bush. After 3 years, it has spread and grown 2 feet tall. It is covered in flowers and 5 different types of been go crazy over the flowers.
And the pollinators!!
I use Ajuca in containers that develop a bare spot as the summer progresses. Mine develops a lot of purple and pink colors when it gets sun. I trim it to get cuttings. I rough up the soil then press the cuttings into the soil then water it in. It grows like a beautiful weed and comes up easily when I want to move it aside to plant something else. Some even grow in a rosette form. It is also my favorite spiller in several containers.
Much Mahalos to you Linda. I live on the Big Island of Hawaii. I am obsessed with plants and garden. Enjoy your advice, but most everything grows here. But have to be careful and not do evasive plants. You always give me ideas tho.
Hi Linda I’m from New Zealand really enjoying your channel, content is so inspiring and helpful,also loving the veiwers comments❤️
Hi fellow Kiwi! I'm in Kilbirnie, Wellington - nothing between us and Antartica - but no frosts. How about you?
Interesting about differences in zones and microclimates. Although dwarf Nandina does well in some areas of my garden, it does not on the area where I want it and though Vinca minor does extremely well, it is a much-loved cover for moccasins and rattlesnakes. Yikes. We just can't have everything we want, where we want it, when we want it. We have too many mosquitoes for monkey grass, so I keep trying to find the appropriate groundcover to my liking.
I have black scallop ajuga in a 20ft section that hard to mow. Love the happy purple flowers.
Oregano and thyme looks great as a filler between plants and it even survives the winter freezes here in zone 8 north Tx.
I have black scallop ajuga with creeping Jenny. It’s a fabulous combination.
I panted both ajuga and creeping Jenny late last year (I moved the Jenny from containers where they had been since spring) to the ground. Looking forward to seeing how they do this year.
This is very helpful! I live south of you in Austin Texas and I have 4 large beautiful live oaks, but can’t get grass to grow under them. They are also so messy! The dropping of leaves, acorns and tassels fall and spring. I need something easy to blow all the mess that drops over the dirt and whatever I plant there, to be fuss free for clean up
So glad I found your wonderfully helpful channel. So inspiring!
I'd come fix your garden bench anytime Linda! By the way, the technical term for anything laid under your brick (gravel, sand, etc) is underlayment.
Thanks Linda this was very helpful. My problem area is under my pine tree... grass just won’t last there.
My favorite ground covers:
1. Sandwort (Arenaria Montana) -- Flowers very heavily in early summer but it only flowers once a year. The greenery is kinda pillowy looking and the plant tolerates heat and sun. It needs some time to establish it's self before people walk on it, but after it establishes it's self, it's pretty rugged. I've seen kids stomp on it, and it seemed ok.
2. Oxalis -- shade loving, this plant doesn't like dryness or heat. Ideally you keep the ground moist, but it can even tolerate bogginess if you over water.
This plant does not spread on it's own, but the tubers are extremely easy to propagate. Squirrels like it.
3. Violets -- also shade loving, but tolerates sun and traffic a bit more than Oxalis.
4. alyssum -- this doesn't need more explanation.
5. Chives -- it's edible and bees like it (that said, chive honey is only suitable for bbq. ).
What zone are you gardening in?
@@kimberlyhight162 I currently live in zone 8b, but I grew up in zone 4, which is where I first encountered Sandwort.
If I still lived in Utah, I would not grow oxalis.
Your gardens are beautiful ! I just found your chanel today . Thank you !
I live in Oregon, have towering trees behind my yard which leave little sun able to peak through when in full foliage. Then there are the Pacific Northwest weeds--easily the most prolific that I have ever seen and more of a challenge than I can possibly keep up with (having tried year after year and ultimately have failed)...Because I refuse to use weed killers, I realized that the moss that grows everywhere is both beautiful in its myriad variations as well as in an endless supply!! I have finally started using it as a ground cover to replace the lawn and in some problem areas. I have to say this might be my primary solution. Love your videos, Linda! I have learned so much from you! ps, I did not know that Stuart had COVID. So glad he has recovered!
Oh Ruth! I would love to be able to grow moss like that! I find it quite beautiful… But unfortunately, it does not like our dry climate. That sounds absolutely magical!
@@LindaVater Isn't it! I got the idea after spending a week clearing off loads of moss from my roof before the rains began. The moss is excessively produced due to limited light from the forest behind my yard. I saved most of it in several of my garden baskets (adding a few more to my supply from my local Goodwill after watching your videos) and kept wondering what to do with it all, always loving the variety of textures and color. Then the lightbulb.
I call ajuga a traveling plant. We had ajuga at the base of a pine tree, and over the years it moved out into a ring. The ring got bigger and bigger until it petered out. You can solve this by transplanting some of the ajuga back to its original position.
Violets are amazing ground cover too. I've tried carpet chamomile, which smells delicious, but needs help before it gets established, because vigorous weeds grow through it when it's first introduced
My favorites here in Zone 6 so far with my experimenting is lamium, ajuga, and some perennial and annual alyssum then there is the unkillable bishops weed that has come in from my neighbors yard and it grows anywhere sun, shade, wet, dry it doesn't care.
Yup. All great performers!
I like Firewitch dianthus, gray-green mounds that have hot pink flowers in early spring, with some silver mound clumps.
I trim the dianthus after blooming and it will bloom again in early fall. It does not transplant well but is easy to add small starts from my local nursery in May in NE Oklahoma. I like ajuga too.
Both GREAT selections. Thank you for sharing!
Love using creeping thyme as a groundcover!
Surprised you recommend nandina though, as it is on the US list of invasive plants. (And just BTW, listed as toxic to cats & dogs by ASPCA Animal poison center)
I hate it!!!
But the firepower that I have is not invasive....doesn't fruit. And it's quite like what she showed. However, the mid-sized ones I have do fruit and the regular larger ones, of course, do. And both are what I would def term as invasive. But I'm in Mid TN. Maybe it's different elsewhere.
I just looked it up to check:
No, Nandina Firepower is generally not considered invasive. This dwarf cultivar of Nandina domestica is sterile and doesn't produce berries, which reduces the risk of it spreading beyond its intended area.
I agree that Dwarf Mondo Grass is great. One suggestion to beat the high cost is to plant it in a woodland and harvest it as necessary.
Love these anecdotes and your anecdotes.
I have creeping lemon thyme as a ground cover and some staggering red and green hens and chicks and red and green stone crop , i live in a zone 8B
Great video! How doesn't she have more subscribers??? She is a wealth of knowledge and great ideas
That having been said, I've planted scotch moss and thyme intermittently between stones in the back walkway last spring. Hoping they all grow to meet each other this year.
You are so kind! We’ve only been doing this since about last March. I’m so pleased to find it helpful. Yes I adore scotch moss and wish I could grow it more successfully here
@@LindaVater my husband found your channel a little while back. You were a guest on Jim Putnams channel.
We just bought our first home and pretty new to this stuff. We planted quite a few things last year but boy we wish we knew what we do now lol
Having to relocate things and such since things just aren't having the look we were going for. And of course we didn't plant everything in the right conditions.
Do you take any video requests?
Love the herb idea for pots. Thanks.
I like the brick and stone combo. Not fussy! also the plants :-)
We live in OKC and tried many plants on your list, although the heat of the sun was too much or the clay. We're also looking at getting Buffalo grass or clover in the front yard. Thanks for the great information.
Linda, I've just discovered your channel and am enjoying your presentation style and good ideas. I live in southeastern Washington, desert country, but we're also zone 7, with cold winters and very hot dry summers, so your recommendations are especially valuable for our climate.
Golden oregano will grow a foot or more tall in some sites. NEVER let it go to seed; it will be everywhere. Keep it pruned low or put it in a spot that’s quite dry. I have a patch that hugs the ground and is beautiful-it is well behaved because it is thriving on neglect. Anyway, that’s my experience with golden oregano.
Hi Linda! Love your inspiration, thank you! I love in Eastern New Mexico and have accidentally found a plant that can be used in areas ground cover is challenging and that is catmint.
Catmint has tolerated our harsh NM weather which is boiling and freezing. I use it around patios etc. It doesn't mind if I forget to water and you can shape it. I prefer the natural round tendency however.
Thanks for all your great ideas!
Hi, Linda. Our friend sent your video because we currently have a problem with this very issue. So, thank you. We will view this video several times to make our decision. You are coming from Oklahoma. We lived in Crown Heights for many years and wondered if you are speaking from there, from Nichols Hills, maybe from Tulsa. Thank you, Sandy and Steve Briggs
I'm anxious to try some of your favorites. One of my favorites is creeping thyme (creeping herb)... Blessings, love and hugs.
I have mondo grass and bugleweed in my yard and didn't know what they are. Thanks!