Aspidistra. Latin for “totally easy.”

Often used as a houseplant, Aspidistra elatior, commonly known as cast iron plant, lives up to its name in my garden (note: that’s not my garden below).

Photo by Nino Barbieri, via Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 Unported  license. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Aspidistra_elatior_-_01.jpg

Photo by Nino Barbieri, via Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 Unported license. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Aspidistra_elatior_-_01.jpg

If you have dense shade and live in warmer climes, Aspidistra is a terrific choice for either an evergreen groundcover or an accent plant. It accepts neglect, drought, heat, humidity, and apparently, salt. It copes well with my acid clay. If you have alkaline sand, well, have a go and let me know how it works out.

Use this plant! It won’t trouble you, I promise, and it’s more interesting than most big-box store offerings. Black thumbs of the world, you are on notice. Prepare to surrender your titles.

Plant Delights Nursery carries a number of unusual and attractive Aspidistra species. But if, like me, your pockets aren’t quite so deep, they’re not hard to find elsewhere (even those big-box stores; check the houseplant section. But support your local independent nurseries.).

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Helleborus orientalis

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Helleborus orientalis (Lenten rose):

white hellebore flowering

Passed along to me by my neighbor, these lovelies bloom when little else does (late December or early January, on until April or early May), persevere under impossible conditions, require virtually nothing in the way of attention from me, and have bold evergreen foliage.

Consider this plant as an alternative to English ivy for a groundcover beneath large trees. (English ivy is invasive in many areas of the United States.) Hellebores grow in dry shade, even at the bases of oak and maple trunks. But they’ll perform equally well in slightly more hospitable areas. I grow mine under azaleas and rhododendrons, at the bases of trees, in the dry no-man’s land by my front steps, and in clusters in beds throughout the garden.

purple hellebore in bloom

They are expensive at the nursery or garden center, but if you have a neighbor who grows them, he or she probably has plenty to share. If you can get a mature clump or two in flower, in time to drop seed in your garden, you’ll be set. Hellebores reseed generously but are not at all difficult to manage. I have successfully transplanted tiny seedlings, like the ones below, by sticking my finger into the dirt, shoving the plant in, and walking away. I don’t even water them in, unless it’s exceptionally dry. hellebore seedlings

By the way, seedlings are generally much more congested than this. Simply pluck them up and put them where you want them. The plants do take about three years to flower from seed, but they leaf out quickly and provide a fresh evergreen groundcover as they grow. Wouldn’t you rather look at this than at mulch?

Helleborus orientalis

The only real maintenance I do is to cut off any tatty looking foliage when I see it. Not a burdensome task.

Pine Knot Farms is an excellent grower of these magnificent plants. Give them a try.