A bare stone path or terrace can look very austere but most have a few crevices and cracks that can accommodate low growing plants that aren t trip hazards.
Plants for rock crevices.
The beauty of a well planned rock garden is the rocks and plants work together to elevate each other s impact.
A rock garden sometimes known as a rockery or alpine garden is a planting area designed with a hardscape featuring a selection of gravels rocks and or boulders it typically includes softscape plants suitable to those conditions.
Low growing they work wonderfully when tucked into crevices in stone walls or nestled among other plants in the garden.
The plants also have dark needlelike evergreen foliage that remains attractive all year long.
An ideal rock garden plant creeping phlox thrives in poor dry soil that drains quickly after rain.
Alpine plants grow happily in sun warmed natural crevice gardens in a summer that may last only a few weeks in the high altitudes of their native habitat.
Cliff gardens rockeries and alpine screes with a twist.
And these hardy little plants often have.
Rock garden plants with gentiana septemfida gentiana septemfida flower.
Plants for rocky areas in partial shade moist conditions.
While a small niche may look unattractive to use the paving provides a cool and damp area that s often perfect for small alpines or sun loving and compact herbs.
Alpine plants which often dislike wet conditions and are adapted to growing in poor soils are another option as are many wild flowers such as welsh poppy which thrive in poorer soils.
Creeping phlox produces carpets of blue purple rose pink or bicolor blooms.
The roots penetrate into rocky crevices and the swollen base of the plants allows them to rock in the strong wind.
Photo by wendy hatoum.
The denver botanic garden s crevice rock gardens in early april.
Plant in well drained dry soil.
The plants in these pockets are kept warmer and less waterlogged in the winter and cooler and moister in the summer.
A majority of these plants come down from the mountains and other high elevation regions of the world.
Gentiana septemfida is highly valued for its true blue flowers.
1 3 ālula and pua ʻala are perfectly designed for their windy habitats on steep coastal cliffs.
Rock crevices create a favorable environment for growing plants that would not normally survive in your zone.
Your local garden center if reputable will stock plants suitable for your region and can guide you further on what will be hardy in your area.
Plants with a trailing habit such as ivy leaved toadflax are designed for cascading down rock faces or scree slopes and can thrive in a wall.
While both species can grow to an amazing height of 16 feet brighamia insignis tends to be a larger plant than b.