7 Low-maintenance Ground Cover Plants

Ground cover plants



Ground-level plants are a great way to add greenery to your garden, while also reducing the maintenance required. Also, growing ground covers fill in spaces where other plants refuse to grow. Here are 11 low-maintenance options that require very little care to keep looking good year after year. Consider growing them to expand your landscape with beautiful foliage that brings texture and interesting patterns to the garden! These low-maintenance landscape plants are an attractive and practical addition to any garden, providing an attractive and hassle-free way to keep your landscape beautiful with minimal effort. Some give off beautiful scents and attract pollinators, while others are edible, or have medicinal properties. Read on to know more about them.


1 Aromatic Aster


Fragrant aster grows well in hardy zones 3 through 8. They can tolerate poor and droughty soils. From August to September, attractive flowers with violet-blue thin petals are arranged around a yellow center, making them excellent choices for a dry and sunny garden. Also, these flowers attract butterflies and birds. The solid blue-green leaves fill the air with the scent of balm when crushed


2 Purple Poppy Mallow



Purple poppy mallow thrives in hardiness zones 4 to 8 and grows 6 inches to 1 foot tall and spreads 6 inches to 3 feet. They offer a spectacular display of magenta-colored, cup-shaped flowers that occur from mid-spring through fall. They prefer full sun and grow easily in dry or moist soil in sunny locations in the garden.


3 Creeping Phlox


Creeping phlox offers colorful and fragrant flowers from early to late spring, creating a striking carpet in the yard. They make a beautiful appearance as they grow along paths and fall over retaining walls. Give them full sun for best growth, 3 to 6 inches tall and 1 to 2 feet wide.


4 Bunchberry


Native to Greenland and eastern Asia and North America, this plant brings dense clusters of veined, oval leaves, beautiful flowers, and bright red berries in August. Fruits are edible and attract humans and birds. Prefers to grow in cool climates with plenty of shade. They grow happily under trees, shrubs, and other shady areas in the garden. When grown in the right conditions, they grow 3 to 9 inches tall and spread 6 inches to 1 foot.


5 Woodland Stonecrop



Woodland stonecrop is part of the succulent family that displays whorls of fleshy and rounded pale-green leaves. In April, they bloom with small white flowers that rise on stems above the leaves and are beautiful when planted in rocky landscapes and rock gardens. They grow well in full sun and partial shade.


6 Sea Thrift


Sea buckthorn grows best in dry, sterile soil next to the salt spray of the oceans. In April, they bear clusters of small pink or white flowers that form a spherical shape. Flowers are highly prized by butterflies and bees.


7 Roundleaf Liverleaf



Roundleaf liverleaf flowers are an important early source of nectar for pollinating insects. When planted in rich and consistently moist soil, they will self-sow to create a matting effect. They prefer partial shade and grow well in hardiness zones 3 through 8.

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