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Vinca minor

Vinca Minor Creates Evergreen Coverage with Spring Blue Flowers

Vinca minor, commonly called Common Periwinkle or Creeping Myrtle, is a low-growing evergreen groundcover valued for glossy green foliage and cheerful violet-blue flowers in spring. It creates a dense mat of trailing stems that root as they spread, helping cover bare soil and bring year-round texture to shaded or partially shaded landscape beds.

Unlike many groundcovers grown only for foliage, Vinca minor adds seasonal flower color as well. The blooms appear most heavily in spring, with occasional scattered flowers possible later in the season. This makes it a useful choice when homeowners want dependable evergreen coverage with a softer, more decorative look than plain green groundcover.

A Shade-Tolerant Groundcover for Slopes, Beds, and Underplanting

Vinca minor is especially useful in part shade to full shade, where turfgrass and many flowering perennials struggle. It works well beneath open-canopy trees, along shaded walkways, around shrubs, on banks, and in difficult areas where a low, spreading plant is needed to help cover soil.

Once established, Vinca minor forms a thick carpet that helps give the landscape a finished appearance. It can also help stabilize soil on gentle slopes and reduce exposed bare ground in managed beds. For the best look, plant in prepared soil, water well during establishment, and trim the edges as needed once the planting fills in.

Glossy Evergreen Leaves for Year-Round Texture

The foliage is one of the biggest reasons gardeners choose Vinca minor. Its small, smooth, glossy green leaves remain attractive throughout much of the year, adding color and texture to shaded beds even when many perennials are dormant.

Vinca minor stays low, commonly around 4 to 6 inches tall, while spreading outward by trailing stems. That low profile makes it useful around taller shrubs and perennials, as long as it is maintained so it does not crowd the crowns of neighboring plants. It also works well spilling over walls, raised beds, and containers.

Low Maintenance Once Established, with Simple Seasonal Care

Vinca minor is generally considered deer-resistant and rabbit-resistant, making it a practical groundcover for properties where browsing can be an issue. It is also drought-tolerant once established, although it looks best with moderate moisture during extended dry periods.

Good bed preparation makes a big difference. Remove weeds before planting, loosen compacted soil, and mulch lightly between new plants until they fill in. Once the groundcover is established, prune or edge the planting after flowering or during the growing season to keep it neat, dense, and within the area you want covered.

Choose a 4-Inch Pot or a Flat of 50 Plants Based on Project Size

Choose the 4-inch pot when you need a small number of Vinca minor plants for containers, replacement spots, small edging areas, or a limited groundcover patch. A 4-inch pot gives you a more established individual plant that is easy to place into a planter, tuck into a smaller bed, or use where only a few plants are needed.

The flat of 50 plants is designed for larger groundcover projects that require more plants at a lower cost per plant. Each flat includes 50 individual 2-inch-by-2-inch peat pots for direct planting in the ground, saving time during installation and reducing transplant disturbance. These smaller peat-pot plants are ideal when you are planting a bank, slope, shaded bed, or broad groundcover area and want to space many plants evenly for faster coverage. For best results, prepare the soil first, lay out the plants before planting, water the flat well before installation, plant each peat pot level with the surrounding soil, and water thoroughly after planting so the young Vinca minor roots settle into the ground.

Vinca Minor Creates Evergreen Coverage with Spring Blue Flowers

Vinca minor, commonly called Common Periwinkle or Creeping Myrtle, is a low-growing evergreen groundcover valued for glossy green foliage and cheerful violet-blue flowers in spring. It creates a dense mat of trailing stems that root as they spread, helping cover bare soil and bring year-round texture to shaded or partially shaded landscape beds.

Unlike many groundcovers grown only for foliage, Vinca minor adds seasonal flower color as well. The blooms appear most heavily in spring, with occasional scattered flowers possible later in the season. This makes it a useful choice when homeowners want dependable evergreen coverage with a softer, more decorative look than plain green groundcover.

A Shade-Tolerant Groundcover for Slopes, Beds, and Underplanting

Vinca minor is especially useful in part shade to full shade, where turfgrass and many flowering perennials struggle. It works well beneath open-canopy trees, along shaded walkways, around shrubs, on banks, and in difficult areas where a low, spreading plant is needed to help cover soil.

Once established, Vinca minor forms a thick carpet that helps give the landscape a finished appearance. It can also help stabilize soil on gentle slopes and reduce exposed bare ground in managed beds. For the best look, plant in prepared soil, water well during establishment, and trim the edges as needed once the planting fills in.

Glossy Evergreen Leaves for Year-Round Texture

The foliage is one of the biggest reasons gardeners choose Vinca minor. Its small, smooth, glossy green leaves remain attractive throughout much of the year, adding color and texture to shaded beds even when many perennials are dormant.

Vinca minor stays low, commonly around 4 to 6 inches tall, while spreading outward by trailing stems. That low profile makes it useful around taller shrubs and perennials, as long as it is maintained so it does not crowd the crowns of neighboring plants. It also works well spilling over walls, raised beds, and containers.

Low Maintenance Once Established, with Simple Seasonal Care

Vinca minor is generally considered deer-resistant and rabbit-resistant, making it a practical groundcover for properties where browsing can be an issue. It is also drought-tolerant once established, although it looks best with moderate moisture during extended dry periods.

Good bed preparation makes a big difference. Remove weeds before planting, loosen compacted soil, and mulch lightly between new plants until they fill in. Once the groundcover is established, prune or edge the planting after flowering or during the growing season to keep it neat, dense, and within the area you want covered.

Choose a 4-Inch Pot or a Flat of 50 Plants Based on Project Size

Choose the 4-inch pot when you need a small number of Vinca minor plants for containers, replacement spots, small edging areas, or a limited groundcover patch. A 4-inch pot gives you a more established individual plant that is easy to place into a planter, tuck into a smaller bed, or use where only a few plants are needed.

The flat of 50 plants is designed for larger groundcover projects that require more plants at a lower cost per plant. Each flat includes 50 individual 2-inch-by-2-inch peat pots for direct planting in the ground, saving time during installation and reducing transplant disturbance. These smaller peat-pot plants are ideal when you are planting a bank, slope, shaded bed, or broad groundcover area and want to space many plants evenly for faster coverage. For best results, prepare the soil first, lay out the plants before planting, water the flat well before installation, plant each peat pot level with the surrounding soil, and water thoroughly after planting so the young Vinca minor roots settle into the ground.

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Vinca minor

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Description

Vinca Minor Creates Evergreen Coverage with Spring Blue Flowers

Vinca minor, commonly called Common Periwinkle or Creeping Myrtle, is a low-growing evergreen groundcover valued for glossy green foliage and cheerful violet-blue flowers in spring. It creates a dense mat of trailing stems that root as they spread, helping cover bare soil and bring year-round texture to shaded or partially shaded landscape beds.

Unlike many groundcovers grown only for foliage, Vinca minor adds seasonal flower color as well. The blooms appear most heavily in spring, with occasional scattered flowers possible later in the season. This makes it a useful choice when homeowners want dependable evergreen coverage with a softer, more decorative look than plain green groundcover.

A Shade-Tolerant Groundcover for Slopes, Beds, and Underplanting

Vinca minor is especially useful in part shade to full shade, where turfgrass and many flowering perennials struggle. It works well beneath open-canopy trees, along shaded walkways, around shrubs, on banks, and in difficult areas where a low, spreading plant is needed to help cover soil.

Once established, Vinca minor forms a thick carpet that helps give the landscape a finished appearance. It can also help stabilize soil on gentle slopes and reduce exposed bare ground in managed beds. For the best look, plant in prepared soil, water well during establishment, and trim the edges as needed once the planting fills in.

Glossy Evergreen Leaves for Year-Round Texture

The foliage is one of the biggest reasons gardeners choose Vinca minor. Its small, smooth, glossy green leaves remain attractive throughout much of the year, adding color and texture to shaded beds even when many perennials are dormant.

Vinca minor stays low, commonly around 4 to 6 inches tall, while spreading outward by trailing stems. That low profile makes it useful around taller shrubs and perennials, as long as it is maintained so it does not crowd the crowns of neighboring plants. It also works well spilling over walls, raised beds, and containers.

Low Maintenance Once Established, with Simple Seasonal Care

Vinca minor is generally considered deer-resistant and rabbit-resistant, making it a practical groundcover for properties where browsing can be an issue. It is also drought-tolerant once established, although it looks best with moderate moisture during extended dry periods.

Good bed preparation makes a big difference. Remove weeds before planting, loosen compacted soil, and mulch lightly between new plants until they fill in. Once the groundcover is established, prune or edge the planting after flowering or during the growing season to keep it neat, dense, and within the area you want covered.

Choose a 4-Inch Pot or a Flat of 50 Plants Based on Project Size

Choose the 4-inch pot when you need a small number of Vinca minor plants for containers, replacement spots, small edging areas, or a limited groundcover patch. A 4-inch pot gives you a more established individual plant that is easy to place into a planter, tuck into a smaller bed, or use where only a few plants are needed.

The flat of 50 plants is designed for larger groundcover projects that require more plants at a lower cost per plant. Each flat includes 50 individual 2-inch-by-2-inch peat pots for direct planting in the ground, saving time during installation and reducing transplant disturbance. These smaller peat-pot plants are ideal when you are planting a bank, slope, shaded bed, or broad groundcover area and want to space many plants evenly for faster coverage. For best results, prepare the soil first, lay out the plants before planting, water the flat well before installation, plant each peat pot level with the surrounding soil, and water thoroughly after planting so the young Vinca minor roots settle into the ground.