Did you even know there were 101 landscaping ground cover options?   This is the one stop to learn about all the landscaping  ground covers available to you!

Landscaping Ground covers in your garden serve the same purpose is carpet in your house. It keeps dust out of the air, adds a layer of texture to the space, and outdoor ground cover should also help to prevent weeds, bugs, and soil erosion.

Any type of ground cover you choose should be dense, low-lying, and strong enough to protect the surface underneath. Basic grass is the most common ground cover. For most of us, this is the ground cover option we use for our entire lawn. However, garden options have a wide variety of ground cover options depending on the look, feel, maintenance, and area you are in.  

There are four main types of ground cover, but they all serve the same purpose.

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  1.    Organic Ground Cover. An organic ground cover is a low-lying plant that is dense, beautiful, and blends in with the garden around it. When you choose a good ground cover, it should be hardy, easy to maintain, and durable. The best ground covers are no-fuss plants, that meet the design aesthetic of your garden bed and congruent with your landscape theme.

These is the largest category of ground cover options. Because there are so many different types of plants you can use for organic ground cover, depending on where you are located in the country.

  1.    Between Pavers. If you’re looking to provide ground cover in between pavers or stones, you need a specific type of ground cover. Ground cover between pavers should be dense enough to prevent weeds and no more than 2-inches tall. They should also be beautiful enough to soften the hard lines between the stones.
  2.    Non-Green Ground Covers. These are organic materials like bark and mulch that can still provide nutrients and benefits to your garden but they aren’t a plant in and of themselves. These ground covers benefit from having black yard fabric underneath to prevent weeds and grasses growing through them.   
  3.    Inorganic Ground Cover. Rock, rubber, and other inorganic materials provide a beautiful appearance with minimal maintenance but they don’t provide any additional nutrients to the garden. Many gardeners like to use rocks because they don’t ever have to be replaced or watered, they aren’t blown away or displaced easily, and they don’t naturally decompose and attract bugs, However, they can sink into the soil, retain heat, and disrupt fragile root structures. Though it may be expensive if you have a large space, rubber ground cover such as this one look realistic, stay above the ground surface and are more durable all year round.  If you want a ground cover with no maintainance required, choose this one.  

Are you ready to start down the list?  Make sure you have your yard fabric and your edging kit and supplies ready before you plant.  Here you have it, the ultimate list of 101 ground cover options:

Thick Ground Cover

1Acaia
2Aeonium
3Ajuna
4Alipine Strawberry
5Alyssum
6Amethyst
7Angeline Sedum
8Bacopa
9Barrenwort
10Bergenias
11Black Mondo Grass
12Blue Star Creeper
13Brass buttons
14Bugleweed
15Bunchberry
16Butterburs
17Chameleon Plant
18Cherry Laurel
19Creeping Jenny
20Creeping Juniper
21Creeping Phlox
22Creeping Thyme
23Crocus
24Dead Nettles
25Dianthus
26Dutchman’s Breeches
27Echeveria
28English Bluebell
29Fassen’s Catmint
30Fescue
31Fleabane
32Geranium
33Germander
34Grap Hyacinth
35Hakone Grass
36Hens and Chicks
37Hosta
38Inland Sea Oats
39Interrupted fern
40Ivy
41Lady’s Mantle
42Lamb’s Ears
43Lamium
44Lily of the Valley
45Lilyturf
46Liverleaf
47Lobelia
48Lungwort
49Mache
50Mondo Grass
51Oregano
52Periwinkle vinca Major
53Phlox
54Rock Cotoneaster
55Scotch Mos
56Sedge
57Sedums
58Siberian Squill
59Solomon’s Seal
60Spotted Dead Nettles
61Stonecrop
62Sweet Woodruff
63Thyme
64Trillium
65Western Sword Ferns
66Wood Anemone

 

Between Pavers
67Baby’s Tears
68Blue Star Creeper
69Chamomile
70Creeping Thyme
71Dollhouse Fern
72Dymonida
73Irish Moss
74Jewel Mint
75Mondo Grass
76Sweet Woodruff

Inorganic

77Cobblestone
78Criprap
79crushed concrete
80Decomposed granite
81eff rogg
82Gravel
83lava rock
84marble chips
85pea gravel
86recyclced glass
87red lava chunks
88river rock
89Rock
90shredded rubber
91white beach pebbles

Non-Green

92Bark
93Cypress Chips
94Dyed oak mulch
95Hardwood mulch
96Hemlock
97
Mexican beach pebbles
98Nut hulls
99Pine cones
100Pine straw
101Hay or Straw
Inorganic
77Cobblestone
78Criprap
79crushed concrete
80Decomposed granite
81eff rogg
82Gravel
83lava rock
84marble chips
85pea gravel
86recyclced glass
87red lava chunks
88river rock
89Rock
90shredded rubber
91white beach pebbles

Did you know there were 101 options for ground cover? Here is the ultimate article covering them all.

Did you know there were 101 options for ground cover? Here is the ultimate article covering them all.