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Sep 9, 2016 9:58 AM CST
Thread OP
Name: UrbanWild
Kentucky (Zone 6b)
Kentucky - Plant Hardiness Zone 7a
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I would like to have green, living mulches rather than wood chips. I like sedums and would prefer them given they can keep weeds down, look great AND provide flowers for bees & pollinators. I have seen the tiles at Lowes and they look great. However, I wonder whether a sedum covering would interfere with spring bulbs and perrenials emerging through them. Anyone?
Always looking for interesting plants for pollinators and food! Bonus points for highly, and pleasantly scented plants.

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Sep 9, 2016 12:33 PM CST
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Name: Lynn
Oregon City, OR (Zone 8b)
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Hi UrbanWild,
I grow many ground cover type plants that let the spring bulbs. As far as the other perennials, I think it would depend on the combination of ground cover roots and type of perennial. S. album is one that lets other plants grow up through it.
What sedum do you have in mind?
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Sep 12, 2016 11:27 AM CST
Thread OP
Name: UrbanWild
Kentucky (Zone 6b)
Kentucky - Plant Hardiness Zone 7a
Million Pollinator Garden Challenge Birds Vegetable Grower Spiders! Organic Gardener Native Plants and Wildflowers
Hummingbirder Frogs and Toads Dog Lover Critters Allowed Butterflies Lover of wildlife (Black bear badge)
I have:

SEEDS for Sedum oreganum and Sedum acre (aggressive spreaders I gather, but will bulbs and perennials have problems busting through them?

PLANTS...mainly cuttings but some larger...

Sedum rupestre 'Angelina' stone orpine,

S. spurium 'Dragon's Blood',
S. spurium 'John Creech'

S. makinoi 'Ogon' which seems a VERY slow grower,

S. hispanicum var. minus 'Purple Form'

an unknown Sedum sp. from cuttings which may or may not live...struggling

and a few mixed species tiles a friend gave me.

First preference in some beds to any evergreen sedums appropriate for this use as a living mulch. 'Angelina' maybe? And of course...since I want EVERYTHING... attractive blooms for pollinators maybe?
Always looking for interesting plants for pollinators and food! Bonus points for highly, and pleasantly scented plants.

"Si hortum in bibliotheca habes, nihil deerit." [“If you have a garden and a library, you have everything you need.”] -- Marcus Tullius Cicero in Ad Familiares IX, 4, to Varro. 46 BCE
Last edited by UrbanWild Sep 12, 2016 11:36 AM Icon for preview
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Sep 12, 2016 2:16 PM CST
Name: Greg Colucci
Seattle WA (Zone 8b)
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Urban wild, but experience is that most will play well together - however in your zone I think some from your list will die back each winter and return in spring, which you may not want since it will look dead, and you might forget that it isn't (if you're like me you will forget it isn't dead Whistling )
I did this last year and it is really exciting to see how well they do with each other! I left space for the perennials and didn't plant right up against them. However I think if you are seeding the bed with both sedum and perennials, they'll be fine and a good choice! I tip my hat to you.
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