This plant lines the pathway from my driveway to porch, it can withstand being stepped on and cut back. It looks nice and the blooms add color to the pathway.
I planted this a few weeks ago and watered it twice because it is on a slope. Yesterday I saw that the leaves had brown tips. I have cut the tips off and will apply copper fungicide. Could you give me some suggestions? I live in zone 8b.
The bees like this plant in fall, because they are some of the last plants to have flowers before it gets colder. The birds really like the berries they make over winter (though I think the berries are poisonous to pets and people).
Definitely not boring. I love liriope muscari!
Liriope muscari clumps slowly expand by short stolons, but do not spread aggressively like Liriope spicata.
I love this plant, never thought of it as boring.
This plant lines the pathway from my driveway to porch, it can withstand being stepped on and cut back. It looks nice and the blooms add color to the pathway.
Like your precision!!
Liriope is a great ground cover or used as edging in the home landscape.
It will grow well as erosion control on banks or as edging underneath trees or around shrubs where nothing else will grow.
This plant doesn't have any serious disease problems.
Great video
Can be good for erosion control on steep hillsides
Great for edgings and walkways, but can be invasive!
Liriope rapidly speeds through rhizomes underground.
I planted this a few weeks ago and watered it twice because it is on a slope. Yesterday I saw that the leaves had brown tips. I have cut the tips off and will apply copper fungicide. Could you give me some suggestions? I live in zone 8b.
This plant is also commonly known as Monkey Grass in the horticultural trade.
Is that a dwarf Eupatorium to the left? If so, which?
Found this plant randomly in the wooded area of our property
Can be used for large areas of ground cover with little maintenance and color all year round
Can it be propagated by seeds? Mine gave a lot of tiny blue fruit
Mine crew like crazy. Got into grass had to remove.
Does all liriope get the purple stems?
This plant can be considered invasive in some parts of the southern United States.
Dark black berries ripen in the fall and persist into the winter.
The bees like this plant in fall, because they are some of the last plants to have flowers before it gets colder. The birds really like the berries they make over winter (though I think the berries are poisonous to pets and people).
commonly called lilyturf or blue lily turf
is it an evergreen?
Another common name for this plant is Blue Lily-turf.
Uhhhh... why is he wearing a diaper?
Does not tolerate foot traffic well
The genus is in honor of the woodland nymph, liriope
Thank you for info👍
Tolerates long dry spells
The berries on Liriope can be harmful to pets.
This plant is resistant to deer and rabbits