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pachysandra
Listing 1 - 10 from 60 for pachysandra
Pachysandra - Japanese spurge
... newest hot trend, but with a whole lot more dependability. There are five species of the genus Pachysandra. Four are native to east Asia, and P. terminalis is one of them. Its commonly known as ... , as are insecticidal soaps when the crawlers (unfortunately called babies) are active in early summer. Set Pachysandra 8 or so inches apart throughout the area you want it to cover. Consider planting it ...
whatcom.wsu.edu
Japanes Pachysandra
... who knows anything about gardening knows this stuff is so overused it's not even funny. For years Pachysandra terminalis was the no-brainer groundcover for shade. It became so ubiquitous as to be uninteresting. Still ... it somplace more to its liking. Recently I finally acquired a plant of our North American native Pachysandra procumbens. So far I'm liking it a lot. It's growing well but isn't quite ...
www.mailbag.com
Paghat's Garden: Pachysandra terminalis
... in the spurge's fourth year in our garden (2004). It took almost that long for the pachysandra to become dense in this area. The photo shows the earliest bloom. The flowers will be whiter ... it is grown, although as you can see the white blossoms do add a pleasant spring touch. Pachysandra requires no grooming or pruning or anything beyond shade & moisture. It is very undemanding, though there are ...
www.paghat.com
Pachysandra procumbens
... deeply veined foliage and it flowers for months. One major exception to this rule is Pachysandra procumbens, an East Coast member of the Buxaceae (boxwood) family commonly referred to as Allegheny ... in all, its hard to find a better, all around more useful ground cover than Pachysandra procumbens. GardenWeb Home Page | Cyber-Plantsman Home Page | Underused Plants Letters and Comments | Mailing List ...
www.gardenweb.com
Oxalis - Pachysandra -- Plant Delights Nursery Catalog Page 77
... - Kosteletzkya Lamium - Leucosceptrum Lilium - Liriope Lobelia - Lycoris Lygodium - Manfreda Manihot - Miscanthus Moraea - Musella Nannorrhops - Onychium Ophiopogon - Osmunda Oxalis - Pachysandra Paeonia Panicum - Peltoboykinia Pennisetum - Phlomis Phlox - Phormium Physostegia - Polemonium Polygonatum - Polygonum Polymnia - Pteris Pulmonaria - Rhodophiala Rohdea Rosmarinus - Ruellia Ruscus - ...
www.plantdelights.com
American Daffodil Society - Daffodil FAQs
... be competing for nutrients and moisture, so the answer depends on the fertility of the soil and the aggressiveness of the ground cover. Vigorous, tall-growing, and deeply rooting plants, such as pachysandra and ivy, are likely to discourage daffodils, but they will usually do well in the company of shallow-rooted, trailing plants, such as myrtle, foamflower (Tiarella cordifolia), or creeping phlox ...
daffodilusa.org
Angiosperm Families - Buxaceae Dum.
... Subclass Rosidae; Euphorbiales. APG (1998) Eudicot; peripheral Eudicot (non-core Eudicots, neither Rosid nor Asterid); unassigned at ordinal level. Species 100. Genera 4; Buxus, Notobuxus, Pachysandra, Sarcococca. Economic uses, etc. Supplies ornamentals, and hard, finegrained wood from Buxus (boxwood). Formerly used by wood-engravers for preparing woodcuts for printing. Illustrations. • Buxus ...
delta-intkey.com
Royal Heritage and ivy? - Hellebore Forum - GardenWeb
... is nothing unique or difficult about Royal Heritage. It is just a brand name. That said, I don't use ivy as there are many other interesting and useful ground covers. Asarum canadense, Pachysandra procumbens etc. provide nice low spreading cover for somewhat shady areas that won't harm hellebore roots (hellebore roots grow deep). Epimediums of all kinds are excellent and have the bonus of very ...
forums.gardenweb.com
Groundcovers Forum - GardenWeb
... , Oct 13, 06 at 22:28 2 follow-ups, last one posted on Sun, Oct 22, 06 at 8:50 moving pachysandra Posted by: mervdon 6 on Thu, Oct 19, 06 at 23:43 1 follow-up, posted on Fri, Oct 20, 06 ... PNW on Fri, Sep 29, 06 at 16:17 1 follow-up, posted on Tue, Oct 3, 06 at 17:25 Pachysandra - planting? propagation? & edging Posted by: cdo_and_doug Southern VT on Fri, Sep 29, 06 at 18:28 1 follow-up, posted on ...
forums.gardenweb.com
More from this site
justgardeners.com
... nope -- it won't let you forget it. Oenothera -- Some evening primrose are perfectly safe. Others, like O. tetragona, spread quite vigorously. At least one, O. speciosa, acts like a rampaging hoard. Pachysandra -- it just keeps on going, and going..... Physalis -- The Chinese can have their lanterns back, thank you. Polygonum -- Run away from most of these guys. Fast. Solerolia -- now, why do you ...
justgardeners.com
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