Clover
Sujatha writes~
Is it OK to have clover as the ground cover between plants?
I live in Chicago, zone 5, and have a small plot 3' x 5'
that I am growing a few perennials in. Any advice would be most
helpful, also any web sites you could direct me to, I am very
new to gardening and am terrified I will kill a few before I
settle in!
A. There is white clover and red clover. I have websites below
for both for you. They are not harmful toward your garden plants.
There are quite a large amount of health benefits to man from
these plants. They grow as a living mulch over the roots and
keep them cool during hot spells in the summer. The amount of
water and food which they use will not be large enough to cause
harm to the success of your plants.
I recommend that you do not let it get out-of-hand. Trim it
down every two weeks with a pair of clean, sharp gardening shears.
You can leave the cut stems as added mulch, but if it is self-seeding
quite a bit, you may wish to discard stems of seed pods. In
the fall, the stems will die back but it will reseed itself.
If you decide to till the clover out, be sure not to go too
deeply, as the roots of many perennials are very close to the
soil surface and you do not want to harm them.
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