Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. Martha shares how she planted sedum in the cracks of her stone wall at her winter house. miriam-doerr / Getty Images Sedum plants ...
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. I got an email this past week from a reader which had a question that I have not seen very often — at least not very often on this ...
What: Sedum kimnachii is an excellent groundcover plant, particularly for hot, dry sites with poor soil. This variety forms a flat, dense carpet of glossy chartreuse leaves. Clusters of golden-yellow ...
If you're looking for the perfect ground cover for year-round color in your garden, it's hard to beat sedum, also known as stonecrop. A standout hybrid in the 300-species Sedum genus is Sedum fine ...
Right now with its colorful bright pink flowers in bloom, the sedum called Autumn Joy appears in many perennial beds. It is one of my favorite plants, and it's the sedum most people know. There are ...
Autumn Joy stonecrop, or Hylotelephium telephium 'Herbstfreude', is a popular type of stonecrop, also referred to as sedum. This unique plant combines sedum with ice plant characteristics, displaying ...
Sedum isn’t prone to common enemies of plants such as disease or pests, including heavy insect infestation, or being consumed by animals. I’m guessing that the roots were disturbed or destroyed by a ...
Hello, Mid-Ohio Valley farmers and gardeners! The dry weather continues here in the Valley. I hope we receive the rain which is in the forecast for the weekend. Water needs for our field crops, ...
What: Sedum cauticola “Lidakense,” with the common name stonecrop, is an excellent groundcover plant, particularly for hot, dry sites with poor soil. This variety forms a flat, dense mat of blue-gray ...
Q: I have a sedum plant that is only one year old and already quite leggy. Should I trim it back at this point or wait until spring? Since it is only a year old, should I wait another year or so ...
I got an email this past week from a reader which had a question that I have not seen very often — at least not very often on this plant. The question I got was very strange in that only a part of the ...