Spring Creek, NV (Zone 5a) | January 2019 | positive
An attractive, gently spreading, semi-evergreen groundcover. Gently self-seeds and slowly advances with runners, yet remains non-invasive...Read More. Very hardy in full-sun, clay-loam, zone 5a, xeric (13 in/yr) garden. Can handle light foot traffic, flood irrigation, and is deer resistant. One of our earliest non-native plants to bloom, often blooming through windows in snow. Can handle late spring frost and snowfall with ease. Perhaps because it is such an early bloomer, it attracts honey bees and many smaller native bees.
In their 2010 veronica performance evalutions, the Chicago Botanic Garden gave this cultivar 4 stars out of 5. [...Read Moreagobotanic.org/downloads/planteval_notes/no33_veronica.pdf" target="_dgnew"rel="nofollow">HYPERLINK@www.chicagobotanic.org]
This is the most durable Veronica for this area. It handles freezing, hot, dry. That and it looks good. I have a nice purple/blue carp...Read Moreet out in my yard right now.
A highly attractive drought-tolerant groundcover, forming a dense pillow (suppressing weeds) of furry foliage that makes Wolly tyme look ...Read Morebanal.
Not a slow grower, doing 4-14 inches per year with regular water and full sun, but controllable by less water or simple pruning. (Growth is longer but lanky and thin in the shade, with minimized blooming) The plant is not spreading by underground structures, but by rootlets where it touches the ground. Very old plants may mat in the middle and will benefit from either a hard trimming or being replaced by a cutting of itself, like many groundcovers.
Blooms are more purple blue in the spring and summer, but become an attractive torquise-cobalt when it blooms in the fall and early winter. The greatest blooming is in late spring, when the plant becomes conspiciously dappled with its rounded flowers. The blooming stems are long, and give a long flower duration. Deadheading these short, diagonal spikes encourages more flowers.
Absolutely excellent spilling over a wall or in a graded border. Highly underused in the hot, xeric garden.
An attractive, gently spreading, semi-evergreen groundcover. Gently self-seeds and slowly advances with runners, yet remains non-invasive...Read More
In their 2010 veronica performance evalutions, the Chicago Botanic Garden gave this cultivar 4 stars out of 5. [...Read More
This is the most durable Veronica for this area. It handles freezing, hot, dry. That and it looks good. I have a nice purple/blue carp...Read More
A highly attractive drought-tolerant groundcover, forming a dense pillow (suppressing weeds) of furry foliage that makes Wolly tyme look ...Read More
Low growing with serrated leaves and small blue saucer flowers in late spring. Slow grower. Can withstand light traffic.