Phlox subulata 'Fort Hill' - MOSS PHLOX 'FORT HILL' (moderate spreding)
Creeping phlox (or moss phlox) 'Fort Hill' is a cultivar with rosy-pink, medium to smaller flowers.
Moss phlox or creeping phlox forms dense low evergreen or semi-evergreen mats. In early spring, the flowers completely cover the whole plants.
Easy to grow perennial, the only need is some sunlight and drainage. Favorite rock garden plan, or edging plant, for dry slopes, as substitute for the lawn in sunny drier soil, sunny areas of woodland gardens, for native plant gardens or naturalizing. Looks very good with rock.
Even this plant is considered "ground covering" plant, it's not highly competitive for true groundcover - it can compete only on sunny and dry spots (other plants can quite easily self-seed, intermingle or even overpower it).
Blooming time : usually for a couple weeks in April/May
Size : 4” tall x 35" wide
USDA zones : 3 to 9
Culture : full sun, half shade, dappled sun, organic, gravelly, rocky, sandy soils, poor and shallow soils, xeriscape. Adaptable plant, but drainage is essential!
Moisture Needs : dry, medium-dry, soil has to be drained
Origin : wild form of Phlox subulata is native wildflower to states from Michigan, Ontario and New York south to Tennessee and mainly in the Appalachians to North Carolina. Often found on dry, rocky or sandy places, open woodland areas, limestone barrens and slopes. See the USDA distribution map.
Deer/rabbit resistant : yes / yes
Attracts Butterflies or Pollinators : butterflies, skippers, and long-tongued bees, small bugs can feed on leaves
Attracts Hummingbirds : no
Pot Size : 3.5" perennial pot (1.22 pt/580 ml)
Picture copyright : US Perennials
Plant combinations : For the edges, along patios and paths, rock gardens, trough gardens, crevice gardens, slopes. Best combined with smaller to medium sized perennial – from native choose shorter Agastache, Anemone patens, Antennaria, Asclepias tuberosa, dwarf Baptisia, Campanula rotundifolia, Coreopsis, Cunila origanoides, Dalea, shorter Echinacea, Gaillardia, Gaura (shorter cultivars), smaller cultivars of Heuchera (in cooler regions), Penstemons, Ruellia humilis, shorter cultivars of Stokesia, Verbena canadensis, native grasses like Boutelloa gracilis, Koeleria cristata, Sporobolus heterolepis 'Tara' (or non-native Sesleria).
And non-native perennials like Achillea, summer blooming Allium, shorter Aquilegia, Armeria, Calamintha, Campanula, Cerastium, Delosperma, Dianthus, Geranium (G. sanquineum, G. dalmaticum and x cantabrigiense, G. cinereum, G. endresii, G. renardii), Gypsohila, Iris (dwarf and miniature bearded Iris), shorter Lavandula, shorter Nepeta, Origanum, shorter Platycodon, Satureja, Salvia, Sedum, Sempervivum, low Stachys,Scabiosa columbaria, Thymus, lower Veronica and many spring bulbs.
Phlox subulata 'Fort Hill' - MOSS PHLOX 'FORT HILL' (moderate spreding)
Creeping phlox (or moss phlox) 'Fort Hill' is a cultivar with rosy-pink, medium to smaller flowers.
Moss phlox or creeping phlox forms dense low evergreen or semi-evergreen mats. In early spring, the flowers completely cover the whole plants.
Easy to grow perennial, the only need is some sunlight and drainage. Favorite rock garden plan, or edging plant, for dry slopes, as substitute for the lawn in sunny drier soil, sunny areas of woodland gardens, for native plant gardens or naturalizing. Looks very good with rock.
Even this plant is considered "ground covering" plant, it's not highly competitive for true groundcover - it can compete only on sunny and dry spots (other plants can quite easily self-seed, intermingle or even overpower it).
Blooming time : usually for a couple weeks in April/May
Size : 4” tall x 35" wide
USDA zones : 3 to 9
Culture : full sun, half shade, dappled sun, organic, gravelly, rocky, sandy soils, poor and shallow soils, xeriscape. Adaptable plant, but drainage is essential!
Moisture Needs : dry, medium-dry, soil has to be drained
Origin : wild form of Phlox subulata is native wildflower to states from Michigan, Ontario and New York south to Tennessee and mainly in the Appalachians to North Carolina. Often found on dry, rocky or sandy places, open woodland areas, limestone barrens and slopes. See the USDA distribution map.
Deer/rabbit resistant : yes / yes
Attracts Butterflies or Pollinators : butterflies, skippers, and long-tongued bees, small bugs can feed on leaves
Attracts Hummingbirds : no
Pot Size : 3.5" perennial pot (1.22 pt/580 ml)
Picture copyright : US Perennials
Plant combinations : For the edges, along patios and paths, rock gardens, trough gardens, crevice gardens, slopes. Best combined with smaller to medium sized perennial – from native choose shorter Agastache, Anemone patens, Antennaria, Asclepias tuberosa, dwarf Baptisia, Campanula rotundifolia, Coreopsis, Cunila origanoides, Dalea, shorter Echinacea, Gaillardia, Gaura (shorter cultivars), smaller cultivars of Heuchera (in cooler regions), Penstemons, Ruellia humilis, shorter cultivars of Stokesia, Verbena canadensis, native grasses like Boutelloa gracilis, Koeleria cristata, Sporobolus heterolepis 'Tara' (or non-native Sesleria).
And non-native perennials like Achillea, summer blooming Allium, shorter Aquilegia, Armeria, Calamintha, Campanula, Cerastium, Delosperma, Dianthus, Geranium (G. sanquineum, G. dalmaticum and x cantabrigiense, G. cinereum, G. endresii, G. renardii), Gypsohila, Iris (dwarf and miniature bearded Iris), shorter Lavandula, shorter Nepeta, Origanum, shorter Platycodon, Satureja, Salvia, Sedum, Sempervivum, low Stachys,Scabiosa columbaria, Thymus, lower Veronica and many spring bulbs.