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Tubs of creeping junipers had simply been set over the rubble.
Although it does not bloom, but is evergreen, creeping juniper might be another suggestion for a substitute plant that would thrive in the sunny location.
Two of the most common substitutes are myrtle and ivy or, for sunny slopes where the soil drains well, the creeping junipers.
Dwarf rhododendrons and native Pieris floribunda form an evergreen screen and creeping juniper hugs the ground.
The Creeping Juniper Nature Trail is a half mile long trail on a cordwalk through the rolling sand dunes by Sanderling Nature Center.
Lilyturf (Liriope muscari) can handle the street pit, but it needs to be cut back in late winter; creeping juniper is a full-sun plant and isn't likely to survive on a typical city street.
I've been considering creeping juniper, lilyturf and vinca, but I cannot find any information about how these and other ground covers hold up under the tough conditions between sidewalk and street, including foot traffic, salt and dogs.
They prefer siliceous soil and, as altitude increases, they replace the damp oak forests and Cork Oak; on the high ground they give way to Scots Pine (Pinus sylvestris) forests or to los piornales serranos with creeping juniper.
We sat on metal chairs at the edge of a wild garden full of dwarf pines and spruces, hawthorn and crab apple trees, viburnums laden with orange and red berries, ground covers like cotoneasters and creeping junipers spilling over the earth in waves of many-colored greens.
Creeping cedar may refer to the following plants:
We walked through a dry landscape dotted with the purple blooms of sweet vetch, the yellows of daisy painted cup and showy cinquefoil, and higher up, limber pine and Douglas fir and creeping cedar.
Lycopodium (from Greek lukos, wolf and podion, diminutive of pous, foot) is a genus of clubmosses, also known as ground pines or creeping cedar, in the family Lycopodiaceae, a family of fern-allies (see Pteridophyta).
Although there now are many on the market, one of the most reliable and widely available is Blue Rug (Juniperus horizontalis).
C. parvulum has been found on the roots and stems of old or dead dry land plants such as Juniperus horizontalis and Artemisa species.
How about junipers, especially the ground hugging Juniperus horizontalis types such as Bar Harbor, Blue Rug, Andorra or Waukegan?