Are you planning on putting a stone path in your lawn or garden? If so, you’ve got a great opportunity for some great garden design. Don’t just plunk those stones atop your sod! There are many low-growing perennial plants that are just great between stones in a path, and will add more personality to your garden than mere grass.
To help you select the best ground cover, consider:
- The amount of sunlight reaching your path (full sun, partial shade, full shade), because different plants thrive under different conditions.
- The amount of traffic the plants will need to endure. Light traffic means the plants will be stepped on once or twice a week. Moderate traffic is once a day. And heavy traffic is similar to walking on your lawn several times a day.
- The type of soil (poor or rich) and moisture conditions (wet or dry).
- Appearance: plant height, texture and color. If the path is heavily traveled, or people will be running on it, keep the plant height low, or use a plant that bends easily (you don’t want people tripping over the plants).
Improve the growing conditions when you carve out the soil for your new stone path. It’s difficult to grow anything in a trampled area. The soil gets so compacted that roots cannot deliver water and nutrients to the plant. Add good drainage as well as a layer of topsoil at least 1 in. deep around the stones so your ground cover can thrive.
Finally, help your new ground cover prosper with a weekly soaking (the plants need to stay moist) and a weekly hand weeding. And if you’d like to keep the plants short between the stones, consider plants that tolerate mowing, such as thyme and ajuga.