Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Day lilies! Indestructible and beautiful when they bloom.
Is there a non-invasive day lily?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Day lilies! Indestructible and beautiful when they bloom.
They quickly get huge with few blooms. They’re no longer a recommended plant.
Anonymous wrote:Consider the native Sedum ternatum, aka woodland stonecrop. It is low-growing likes damp, rocky soil and is fine in shade. So you can do rocks to protect the wood fence, and intersperse the sedum as a ground cover.
Another idea is native field pussytoes. It forms a small leaved groundcover that looks a bit like plantain, but with white undersides, and in spring it send up tall slender flowers that look like kitten paws. In my experience they don't flop.
You can scatter some shade loving spring ephemerals in there too, like Virginia bluebells (not too many as they are just a bit big for the space), glories of the snow, crocus, etc.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Day lilies! Indestructible and beautiful when they bloom.
Is there a non-invasive day lily?
Anonymous wrote:Day lilies! Indestructible and beautiful when they bloom.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Day lilies! Indestructible and beautiful when they bloom.
Invasive and ugly, and when you decide you hate them, you'll discover how hard it is to get rid of them
Anonymous wrote:Day lilies! Indestructible and beautiful when they bloom.