Good ground covers serve several uses for a gardener. Like mulch, ground covers shade the soil. This cools the plant roots in hot weather and also reduces watering needs. The ground covers reduce the amount of sunlight hitting the soil, thus greatly reducing germination of weed seeds. They accomplish all this while looking very attractive and adding to the beauty of
your garden.
Unlike mulch, many ground covers flower, and they are mostly permanent. Instead of decom-posing into the soil as mulch does, ground covers expand to cover more territory each year. Ground covers are also a good answer to controlling erosion on steep slopes.
Most ground covers are what we might refer to as aggressive plants. This sounds bad, but in their case, it is a good trait. The more real estate they cover, the less mulch you have to buy each year.
Like all plants, before planting, you need to consider the light, water, and soil requirements of the ground cover. Here’s an example, Pachysandra is a well known ground cover for the shade. Lamium maculatum, commonly called Spotted Dead Nettle, also prefers shade. It has a pretty, variegated leaf which really lights things up, and, depending on the variety you choose,
it gets a lovely flower in May that could be white or pink. It requires moist shade with good drainage, where the pachysandra will perform better in drier shade.
If you have a constantly moist shady area, try some native ginger. It makes a lovely ground cover and is host to the pipevine swallowtail butterfly, but it will die out in dry soil.
A versatile native ground cover which prefers damp shade, but will also do very well in the hot sun, is Golden Ragwort (Senecio aureus). Golden Ragwort, a Pennsylvania native, has a fairly large, dark green leaf, and it will spread quickly. In early spring it sends up bright yellow flowers that are very eye-catching for a full month.