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Planting, Growing, and Caring for Sedums
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Types
- Sedum humifusum makes for a great ground cover and has beautiful, bright yellow flowers
- ‘Brilliant’, ‘Autumn Fire’, and ‘Autumn Joy’ upright sedum (Hylotelephium spectabile, aka Sedum spectabile) add bursts of bright pink and magenta to your garden
- ‘Blue Spruce’ (Sedum reflexum) is a low-growing sedum with blue-green, spruce-like foliage and yellow flowers
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I reside in New Port Richey Florida. Can I grow ground cover Sedum in this climate?
Thank you
We need to level our deck but the sedums are in the way is it o.k.to cut them back now to save them as they will get trampled on or should I dig them up and
Interesting question, Pat! This somewhat depends on the type and from your standpoint the quantity/expanse. You could cut them back now, true. You could let them get trampled and then cut back only the damaged ones. It's usually best not to transplant in summer, as the plants' energy is focused on blooming and sometimes this makes it harder for them to adapt to a new home. Of course, the degree of "trampling" matters, too ... If ours were going to be totally ground into the ground/destroyed, we would definitely move. Sounds like yours are going to get "decked" one way or the other, but fortunately sedum are pretty robust.
I live in Kingston Ontario and this year my sedem is sitting almost on top of the ground. I can actually lift pieces of it off the earth and there are tiny white roots on each piece. The plant is quite old but I have never had this happen before. Any idea what is happening?
I have tri-color sedum planted on my parkway and it is doing very well. I have noticed a couple plants with clover growing right in the middle. Is there any herbicide that can kill the clover without hurting my tri-color sedum
I live in a coastal Maine town, and have four very large sedum plants that I want to move to a different location. Tall variety, grow to about 3' tall,2-3'wide. They are about four years old, and have grown bigger each year. When the flowers bloom, the stems begin to fall away from the center of the plant. When moving them, should I divide each plant? Or, if planted nearer to each other, will the larger plants hold each other's stems more vertical? Thanks for any advice you can share.
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Dan, Some types of flies are beneficial and deter pests; other types of flies are problems. If you have aphids, simply spray with water or use an insecticidal soap. If you have fungus gnats, your plant may be getting too much water and you need to let it dry out between waterings. It's hard to diagnose without knowing more information (color, size, etc.).