this post was submitted on 19 Oct 2023
3 points (100.0% liked)
Gardening
76 readers
10 users here now
/m/gardening is a place for the best guides, pictures, and discussions of all things related to plants and their care. Please give a general location when asking questions. Plant, pest and disease identification are much easier with geographical context. Also check out our friends at: /m/houseplants /m/plants /m/vegetablegardening /m/hydroponics
founded 1 year ago
you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
view the rest of the comments
Sticking with native is a great point, and there's a few there I'd be fine with if they can handle the path traffic. Thyme, mondo grass, or clover are some others I've thought about as alternatives to the typical store grasses. But is this a bad time to try and establish anything? And if so, is there something I can do temporarily to at least put back some soil without potentially losing it due to lack of anything rooting yet? I've thought about a mulch, but I'd end up having to remove it later and that sounds like a pain.
I'm in London UK, so what I know about N. Carolina climate is this big * < — —
But yes, now is a good time to plant bare root shrubs and trees - and potentially spring flowering bulbs but I can't imagine it is going to be good for anything like ground cover. Maybe put down some topsoil and put over some weed suppressing membrane? It would minimise any erosion, keep things neat and you could walk on it. Take it up next March, give it a rake and see if there's a good supplier of wild flower seed for you to scatter.
Thanks for the idea. I'll ponder over it until the next opportunity to get back to the project. I may loosely spread a bag or two of soil before a rain just to test how much stays and how much of a mess it makes when wet.