Caring for carpet bugle plants.
Carpet bugle perennial.
This garden perennial falls into the mint family along with all the useful herbs.
It is known as bugle weed and the more ground hugging species were the carpet bugles.
Unless it s really dry ajuga can usually sustain itself with normal rainfall and there s no need to fertilize this plant.
Plants form a distinctive mound of rounded green leaves bearing short upright spikes of deep blue flowers in spring.
Ajuga reptans black scallop carpet bugle is a creeping perennial prized for its short spikes of fragrant deep blue flowers and very glossy near black scalloped leaves.
Blooming in late spring to early summer the flowers rise above the contrasting spreading rosettes formed by the leaves putting on an eye catching display.
Ajuga reptans is commonly known as bugle blue bugle bugleherb bugleweed carpetweed carpet bugleweed and common bugle and traditionally but less commonly as st.
Of course if it s located in the sun you may need to water it more often.
It is known as bugle weed and the more ground hugging species were the carpet bugles.
Lawrence plant it is an herbaceous flowering plant in the mint family native to europe it is invasive in parts of north america.
Shop bluestone perennials for carpet bugle today.
Once established ajuga plants requires little care.
Unlike the more typical ground covering selections of bugleweed this species is grown more as a clumping edging plant without the same tendency to spread.
Blooming in may the beautiful flowers on our ajuga groundcover will have you thinking spring and summer.
This garden perennial falls into the mint family along with all the useful herbs.
Bugleweed ajuga reptans also called common bugleweed is a fast growing herbaceous perennial ground cover the species name reptans means creeping although it produces beautiful flower spikes and is available in several different cultivars that work well in landscaping it can also make quite a nuisance of itself through its aggressive spreading via underground runners called stolens.
The genus was assigned by linnaeus from the latin for not yoked which refers to a certain part of the flower.