Fragrant, Flourishing Groundcover for California
Get a stunning carpet of fresh green growth cascading from your retaining walls, planters or eroding slopes in your garden. With our Creeping Rosemary, you’ll have the benefits of color and more, like aromatic leaves and richly-hued foliage that grows quickly.
So, adaptable, effortless groundcover is a click away. Your Creeping Rosemary is ready to flourish in your Golden State landscape, with drought tolerance once established and the ability to truly thrive in dry, arid desert conditions. This Creeping Rosemary stands up to whatever Mother Nature has in store.
But the best part? The Creeping Rosemary’s strong beginning. Poised to acclimate and grow well in California locales, it’s a proven performer because it’s been planted, monitored and shipped with best care for your homescape. Our expert horticulturists and plant specialists have hand-selected this easygoing groundcover, and your Golden State garden will exceed expectations as a result.
From erosion control on banks and slopes to a beautiful carpet of greenery on walls and trellises, the Creeping Rosemary shines. Get your own Golden State Creeping Rosemary today!
Planting & Care
1. Planting: Select a location with well-drained soil and full sun – any area with about 6 to 8 hours of sunlight is perfect. The Creeping Rosemary performs best on slopes and banks that need erosion control, or walls and planters where it can grow downward, and if you’re planting as groundcover, plant 5 feet apart, or closer if you want faster coverage. Mulching can control weeds.
When you’re ready to plant your Creeping Rosemary, dig a hole that’s about one and a half to two times the size of your plant’s root ball, place in the hole, back fill the soil and water to settle the roots.
2. Watering: Your Creeping Rosemary is drought tolerant, but it’s important to have a regular watering schedule for the first few growing seasons. Water your Rosemary about once weekly or more often in extreme heat and check the surrounding soil…if the surrounding soil is dry 2 inches down, it’s time to water your plant.
3. Pruning: Prune during spring, before new growth begins.