Step Up to a Different Ground Covering

By Ann M. Mason, Fairfax Master Gardener Intern

Long have I dreamt of an idyllic stone path with plantings leading from the back corner of my

house into our treed, shady back yard. The opportunity to tame this neglected wild area became an immediate task after some recent construction.

After ‘planting’ my stepping-stones, the question was what ? Selecting plants requires answering several typical questions about light, water, soil and pH, and desired look. North Carolina State Extension State Carolina North In addition to these more typical selection factors, function and use of the space further separates plant candidates. In my case, I needed photo: the plants to tolerate some amount of moderate foot traffic (including my garden wheelbarrow).

While this side yard faces west, there are many trees preventing direct sunlight. High filtered light permeates the area most of the late morning until evening. Since the step stone area is at the bottom of a slope, there is a good amount of water when it rains. The soil is our native Virginia clay with an acid pH. My vision is filling in-between the stones and along the edges of planted beds with low, possibly creeping (but not aggressively so) plants. While flowering plants appeal to me, I recall the purple-blue of Ajuga reptans in my childhood backyard and recoil at the number of bee or wasp stings my siblings and I endured. After many years of frequent stings and corresponding crying, our father pulled up all Ajuga and planted a grass that never really became lush.

Plant Choices

Moss (Zones 6 to 10) — I am gardener that likes moss in my shady, often wet, backyard. Prior to the renovation, moss grew in this area. The idea of a moss look-alike appealed to me. Choices might include the perennial Selaginella kraussiana, sometimes called spikemoss, Irish moss, spreading club moss or moss fern. A cousin of a true fern, S. kraussiana forms a dense mat of 2- inch (5 cm) green fronds as it creeps slowly to fill a shady or partial shade, moist to wet area. In fact, S.

kraussiana and other members of this S. braunii Commons Daderot/Wikimedia and S. uncinate, love humidity, shade and damp soil and will wither in direct sunlight. For the alert gardener, photo: photo: Selaginella signals its need for water when its Selaginella kraussiana leaves start to curl up.

Mazus reptans (Zones 5 to 8) — As a low (about 2 inches (5 cm) tall), creeping perennial, it forms a dense, green, almost evergreen carpet in our milder winters and roots wherever its stem nodes touch ground. Mazus tolerates light foot traffic and grows in full sun or part shade in moist or rich soil. In the late spring to

Fairfax County Master Gardeners Association, Inc. | © 2020 early summer, it has purple flowers, and there is also a variety that has white flowers. With few insect or disease problems, it might be a good candidate.

Ornamental thymes (Zones 5 to 9) — Native to the Mediterranean, most members of the Thymus genus love full sun or light shade and dry soil. They tolerate some foot traffic and grow low to the ground usually under 2 to 4 inches (5-10 cm) tall. However, thyme does not thrive in partial to full shade, wet soil or in high humidity. Thymes are wonderful for their fragrance, flowers and prostrate characteristics.

Creeping thyme (Thymus serpyllum) is one fragrant

example of this sun-loving herb that appears to tolerate our hot summers. Its pink or lilac flowers appear in June and July. For my shady, wet stone path these are not a good choice. I use thymes in my sunny plant beds and containers where I can assure regular watering and offer good drainage to prevent wet soil.

Brass buttons (Zones 4 to 10) — squalida, a member of the family, is native to Australasia especially New Zealand and

Gerald Klingaman, University of Arkansas of University Klingaman, Gerald appears as a delicate fern-like, 2 inches (5 cm) tall,

perennial ground cover that grows best in full sun and will tolerate partial shade in hot climates. While photo: photo: Thymus serpyllum Zone 9 gardens can enjoy an evergreen, in our

Zone 7a gardens it is likely that brass buttons will die back and look like a brown mass in the winter and early spring. In June and July, it blooms small yellow fuzzy ‘buttons.’ L. squalida spreads with runners, needs regular watering and shuns compacted soil. Because of its small scale, sometimes it is used in model railroads and miniature gardens.

Sweet woodruff (Zones 4 to 8) — Galium odoratum is an herbaceous perennial that prefers part or full

shade and slightly acid, moist but not soggy soil. In fact, in full sun it might go dormant. This plant has green leaves placed as umbrella-like whorls around a stem. It spreads by both self-seeding and with creeping roots. While it spreads, it does not grow as a dense mat. Rather, other plants can grow through its foliage. I love sweet woodruff for its look under trees and around shady areas with spring blooming Pacific NorthwestExtension Pacific bulbs. But it does not tolerate foot traffic well.

Blue star creeper (Zones 5 to 9) — Known by Galium odoratum photo: several scientific names, Pratia pedunculata, pedunculata, and fluviatilis, it is grown in full sun or partial shade in evenly moist soil. It is known as a plant with quick and aggressive spread by rhizomes to make a short 3-inch (7.6 cm) green carpet with pale blue flowers in spring and early summer. The flowers attract stinging pollinators. Because its growth knows no bounds, this creeper has a mass of web-like roots that are reportedly hard to pull if

Fairfax County Master Gardeners Association, Inc. | © 2020 one decides that this plant is a space bully. Like some other creepers, it allows weeds and other plants to grow within its carpet.

Dwarf cinquefoil (Zones 4 to 8) — Potentilla neumanniana, a plant in the Rosaceae family, grows 2 to 4 inches (5-10 cm) tall in full sun to light shade in moist, well drained soils that are sandy to loamy. It has small, gold flowers in the spring [April to June]. Cinquefoil does not like to be moved once planted. It fades in full shade and performs poorly in hot, humid summers, like in our Zone 7a gardens.

Creeping Jenny (Zones 3 to 9) — Lysimachia nummularia, also called moneywort, is an aggressive creeping perennial from the Family Primulaceae. It flourishes in full sun to part shade and spreads using rhizomes and seeds to form large colonies.

Stems will root wherever they touch ground. Creeping Jenny thrives in damp soil. Its attractive bright yellow color (sun) or lime green (shade) offers an attractive variety of color to the garden bed. Caution: Lysimachia nummularia is characterized as medium invasive on Virginia’s invasive plant list.

In my shady, damp garden path, I am trying both Mazus reptans and Selaginella kraussiana. While both are newly planted, I can see that M. reptans’ joy for my shady, moist path

is quickly expanding some thin growth beyond the limits of the Madison Wisconsin of University space. Keeping it in line will add another gardening task. It is too early to pronounce any conclusion for Selaginella photo: photo: kraussiana, but I love its dense, soft green foliage. Lysimachia nummularia

Resources • Brass Buttons, , Susan Mahr, University of Wisconsin — Madison, Master Gardener Program • Sweet Woodruff, Home Gardening Growing Guide, Cornell University • Mazus reptans, Missouri Botanical Garden • Leptinella squalida, Missouri Botanical Garden • Potentilla neumanniana, Missouri Botanical Garden • Lysimachia nummularia, Missouri Botanical Garden • Plant of the Week: Thyme, Creeping, Mother of Thyme, Gerald Klingaman, University of Arkansas Cooperative Extension Service

Fairfax County Master Gardeners Association, Inc. | © 2020