kid-friendly, mosquito un-friendly alternative to grass?

Anonymous
I'm looking for a shade-loving groundcover alternative to grass that will tolerate foot traffic but not harbor mosquitoes (i.e. not ivy). Any ideas? Grass won't grow in the shade of our big maple tree - we've tried our best. Has anyone done this?
Anonymous
Not much will grow in deep shade. I would let it go. Or do a m oss garden.
Anonymous
Playground mulch?
Anonymous
Pavement.
Anonymous
Concrete slabs.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:I'm looking for a shade-loving groundcover alternative to grass that will tolerate foot traffic but not harbor mosquitoes (i.e. not ivy). Any ideas? Grass won't grow in the shade of our big maple tree - we've tried our best. Has anyone done this?

If you have a silver or other shallow rooted maple then trying to grow anything underneath is a lost cause. Just mulch the area
Anonymous
AstroTurf
Anonymous
Anything in the mint family.
Anonymous
Small rocks/gravel
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Anything in the mint family.


Don't most plants in the mint family need full sun?
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Anything in the mint family.


Don't most plants in the mint family need full sun?


not PP but I had a mint garden in the shade (not heavy shade). You do have to run over it with a mower once a year or every two years, because it can get woody/leggy.

I was going to suggest, dichondra (LOVE dichondra) or baby's tears. Baby's tears is considered a ground cover even though it doesn't take foot traffic very well, because it recovers quickly. So if it's light traffic under the tree, it should be fine.

Please do a google image search for dichondra to see the magical feeling it can impart. They use it at Disneyland.
Anonymous
No. Mint doesn't really need full sun. Every mint plant you look up on a horticulture site will say "prefers full sun" (really, every herb will say that), but mint is an aggressive weed (that is why it's so inexpensive as a flavoring) and can do well pretty much anywhere. I've seen a twenty foot wide patch of thick wintergreen growing in the middle of a forest. I'd be more concerned about the mint doing too well than too poorly.

Most mint has some anti-mosquito properties (really, any thing that smells strongly is an anti-mosquito plant; that's why marigolds work for industrial applications). The mint with the best anti-mosquito properties is catnip, but it probably grows a bit too tall for ground cover. I'd look at low-growing mint varietals (but only if the area is protected by a physical barrier from places you don't want the mint to spread).
Anonymous
Moss. Seriously, moss in a shady spot can be an excellent, soft, kid-proof groundcover.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Small rocks/gravel


We have a similar area to what you describe and I covered with small river rocks (cheap at Home Depot). I covered it with the rocks until I had an inch or so of rock cover. My kids like to play trucks and dig in the rocks. It's almost like a sandbox, with easier clean up.
Anonymous
Steppables (there are other companies; this is the name I remember) has all sorts of options based on sunlight, dampness, traffic. I'd check there.
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