Virginia Creeper

Great Gardening Tips ground covers  


Virginia Creeper

Also known as Woodbine, it will send up sprouts and seed itself, and established plantings may smother shrubs and trees. The deciduous leaves that radiate outward from a leaf stem, like spokes on a wheel. Virginia creeper will thrive in most soils, in sun or partial shade, with or without a structure to climb on. The Virginia Creeper, Parthenocissus quinquefolia, is a fast-growing, high-climbing vine that attaches itself with tendrils which expand, disk-like, on their tips. Where there is nothing to climb, it attaches to the ground with adventitious roots, and makes an excellent cover for slopes or other places where grass is not practical or desired. The leaves turn fiery red in fall and are very showy. Virginia creeper is favored for its brilliant fall foliage and as a manitenance-free ground cover. Each leaflet is about 3"-7" long and an inch or two wide. The berries are blue-black, less than a half-inch across and much relished by birds. Easy to grow, the Virginia Creeper can get out of hand if not managed. When allowed to clamber over trees or other tall structures, it develops elongated leafy festoons that are especially showy. The individual flowers are tiny and inconspicuous, and arranged in elaborate long-stemmed clusters, with each flower at the tip of its own flower stem. ... additional info

 

Liriope . The dark green, ribbon-like foliage grows in length from 12 to 18 in and then recurves toward the ground to form rounded clumps. As the clumps mature they merge into a continuous carpet that resembles a plot of shaggy lawn grass. Liriope, Liriope muscari, is also commonly called border grass and is not actually a grass but a member of the lily family, a fact that inspires another of its common names, Lilyturf, Blue Lillyturf and Bigblue Liriope. Liriope spreads quite fast in reasonable soil, creating a substantial tuberous root mass.

Virginia Creeper
Tips