Product Details
Perennial Ground Covers

Perennial Ground Covers
By David S Mackenzie

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Product Description

Ground covers take on new meaning in this enlightening book designed to make gardeners' work easier. Hostas, stonecrops, smaller rhododendrons, prayer plants, pyracanthas, box huckleberry, hellebores, daylilies, grasses, alpine willows, and unsupported climbing vines are just some of MacKenzie's imaginative suggestions. Even Gunnera manicata, a 6-foot-tall, 8-foot-wide plant, is suggested for some situations!


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #468920 in Books
  • Published on: 2002-07-15
  • Original language: English
  • Dimensions: 2.57 pounds
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 452 pages

Editorial Reviews

Review
Makes finding original groundcovers for large areas with contrast in leaf shape and sizes that go along with companion planting for your landscape easier ... excellent for the amateur or the experienced gardener. National Gardener, August 2002 (National Gardener )

If I need to plant a large section of groundcover among Japanese maples and I want something more interesting than the old standbys, I can pick up Perennial Ground Covers, by David MacKenzie, page through excellent pictures, and find a plant that I had forgotten or never thought would work. Donna Williamson, HortResources newsletter, January 2004 (HortResources )

About the Author
David MacKenzie owns and operates Hortech in Spring Lake, Michigan one of the country's largest and most progressive wholesale ground cover nurseries. When he was just out of college, David discovered in a homeowner's backlot and registered the new Ottawa weeping white pine. He has since reproduced the tree using the grafting method. He has been hybridizing, photographing, researching, lecturing on ground covers, and generally creating plant magic since 1983. David has written several articles for American Nurseryman. He also speaks about landscape photography, native plants, plant research and ecology, as well as his love of ground covers and gardening in Michigan (zone 5). His audience includes master gardeners, serious amateur gardeners, landscape contractors, designers, architects, and horticulture educators.

Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
Native plants are sometimes scorned as unattractive, untamed, too common, or too boring for landscape use. Many people fail to see the purpose of planting something in their yard that they could go out and dig up anywhere. People refer to building contractors many of whom bulldoze every plant in their path as being in the development business. Cleared land to many people is "improved land," and for them, native settings are seen as unattractive representations of chaos. Is it possible that these popularly held notions are wrong? I think so. Native plants do not grow chaotically. Instead, they grow in well-defined ecological niches. As to being unattractive, natives are often beautiful beyond description. Indeed, North American natives such as Point Reyes ceanothus and blue lyme grass are among the showiest of all ground covers. Once tried, they soon dispel the myth that a plant must be an unusual introduced species to be colorful, interesting, or worth growing. Another reason to recommend natives is because they look right. In other words, they appear to be at home in our landscapes. Here are some examples of North American natives that may surprise you with their beauty, diversity, and adaptability. Virginia creeper, a robust native vine that often ascends to 40 feet, also makes a splendid, sturdy ground cover. It sprawls about the woodland floor, displaying glossy, deep green to blue-green, richly-textured, massive, five-parted foliage. Although its flowers are tiny, they yield attractive blue grapelike fruit that helps to feed numerous woodland creatures and birds. The lady fern was named for its grace and beauty. From central and northeastern North America, this plant has few equals when it comes to charm. No, it does not boast showy flowers merely subtly beautiful horseshoe-shaped clusters of brown spores. Yet, after watching its fiddleheads unfurl to yield indescribably lush, cool green foliage, one might forget flowering plants altogether. In the landscape, it functions superbly as a general ground cover in shady sites. Bearberry, occurring from Labrador to Alaska and as far south as Missouri, is among the most durable plants encountered anywhere. It can grow in full sun, face strong winds, and be anchored in pure sand yet somehow thrive with no hint of unhappiness. Its foliage, flowers, and fruit are all attractive, and its landscape uses are many. Rock garden enthusiasts will appreciate spatula-leaved stonecrop, a diminutive succulent that ranges from British Columbia to California. This drought-tolerant, low, matlike ground cover reaches only 2 to 4 inches tall and displays evergreen, bluish green, tightly set foliage. Vibrant yellow flowers in flat-topped clusters appear in mid- to late spring, enhancing its beauty. Various cultivars of this stonecrop have been selected, and at least two of them are exceptional. 'Cape Blanco', hailing from Cape Blanco, Oregon, displays sky blue foliage that during spring and fall becomes tippe