Chrysogonum virginianum var. australe '' green and gold from North Creek Nurseries

Chrysogonum virginianum var. australe

Common: green and gold

Chrysogonum virg. var. australe LP32 - 32 per flat

  • Height: 6"
  • Spread: 12"
  • Spacing: 10"
  • Hardiness Zone(s): 5-9

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Plant Details

One of our favorite native groundcovers for the woodland garden. Yellow daisy-like flowers cover 6" evergreen foliage in spring. Rosettes of leaves slowly spread stoloniferously. Looks great with columbine and Virginia bluebells. This golden star is very similar to Chrysogonum virginianum 'Allen Bush', but has shorter stems and stolons that spread above ground. With a compact and low growing form, this plant has deep, shiny green foliage and golden, star shaped flowers.


Characteristics & Attributes

Exposure

  • Full Shade
  • Part Sun

Soil Moisture Needs

  • Moist
  • Average

Green Infrastructure

  • Woodland
  • Meadow/Prairie

Plug Type

  • Landscape Plug™

Attributes

  • Native to North America
  • Groundcover

Season of Interest (Flowering)

  • Late Spring / Early Summer
  • Early Spring

Propagation Type

  • Vegetative

Care & Maintenance

Tolerant of almost all sun conditions as long as the soil is kept moist and well drained. Golden star blooms best in cooler situations, and so is perfect for a shade garden in hotter zones (Zone 7 and above) and is tolerant of more sun in the cooler zones. To propogate, the plant is easily divided by its clumps. 

Interesting Notes

One of our favorite native groundcovers for the woodland garden, Chyrsogonum virginianum var. australe has yellow daisy-like flowers cover 6" evergreen foliage in spring. Compact rosettes of leaves slowly spread stoloniferously, creating a low-growing carpet of deep, shiny green foliage with golden, star-shaped flowers. Blooms continue on sporadically throughout the summer and are wonderful along an border of a shaded garden site, woodland edges, and in rock gardens.

Chyrsogonum virginianum runs through native woodland areas in the eastern United States. Preferring light filtered shade to dense shade, it grows in a wide variety of soil types. The subspecies, var. australe, is different from the straight species by its more prostrate form, shorter flower stems, and the tendency to spread by aboveground stolon, much like a strawberry. Plant is susceptible to mildew in situations with poor drainage and too much mulch limiting air flow around the leaves.

The carefree nature of goldstar makes it a wonderful addition to a woodland garden. Over the years, it’ll ramble along the edges of garden paths and borders, easily divided and spread, suppressing weeds and providing cheer in spring. Resistant to deer and other mammals, Chrysogonum provides an early season nectar source to pollinators.