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  2. The 10 Best Low-Growing Perennials, According To Gardening ...

    www.aol.com/10-best-low-growing-perennials...

    Choosing low-growing perennials is a convenient and effective ground cover, minimizes erosion, and adds foliage and flowers to the area. We spoke with gardening pros about their preferred low ...

  3. Garden roses - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Garden_roses

    So-called "landscape" roses (also known as "ground cover" roses) have thus been developed to fill the consumer desire for a garden rose that offers colour, form and fragrance, but is also low maintenance and easy to care for. Most have the following characteristics: Lower growing habit, usually under 60 cm (24 inches) Repeat flowering

  4. Your Cheat Sheet to Choosing the Best Plants for Your Garden

    www.aol.com/cheat-sheet-choosing-best-plants...

    Groundcover: Delosperma (Delosperma), also known as ice plant, is a low-growing succulent with flowers that appear from spring to fall in brilliant neon colors, including hot pink, orange, and purple.

  5. 'Tis the Season to Decorate Your Home With These ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/tis-season-decorate-home-festive...

    This low-growing groundcover is a beautiful native plant, though it can be hard to find. ... so it's often known as Lenten rose or Christmas rose. Its papery flowers are stunning against the waxy ...

  6. Hypericum calycinum - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hypericum_calycinum

    Hypericum calycinum is a low, creeping, evergreen woody shrub (classified as a subshrub or shrublet [4]) to about 1 m tall and 1–2 m wide but often smaller. The green, ovate leaves grow in opposite pairs. Usually 4 inches long, the undersides of the leaves are net-veined.

  7. Prostrate shrub - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prostrate_shrub

    Many species of roses grow as long canes that can spread prostrate on the ground, and some of these have been hybridized to form climbing and rambling roses that can be allowed to grow on the ground without support, as well as varieties known as "carpet roses" that are intended to be grown as ground covers. [5]

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