Phlox stolonifera 'Sherwood Purple' creeping phlox from North Creek Nurseries

Phlox stolonifera 'Sherwood Purple'

Common: creeping phlox

Phlox stolonifera 'Sherwood Purple' LP32 - 32 per flat

  • Height: 6"-10"
  • Spread: 8"-18"
  • Spacing: 10"-12"
  • Hardiness Zone(s): 5-8

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Plant Details

Mat-forming habit with masses of star-like, clear purple flowers with deep green foliage. A beautifully vibrant groundcover that will bring excitement to the shade or woodland garden!


Characteristics & Attributes

Exposure

  • Full Shade
  • Part Sun

Soil Moisture Needs

  • Moist
  • Average

Green Infrastructure

  • Woodland

Plug Type

  • Horticultural Plug
  • Landscape Plug™

For Animals

  • Pollinator-friendly

Attributes

  • Native to North America
  • Fragrant
  • Groundcover
  • Drought Tolerant

Season of Interest (Flowering)

  • Late Spring / Early Summer

Propagation Type

  • Vegetative

Care & Maintenance

P. stolonifera thrives in moist, well-drained soils in full to partial shade. Spreads rapidly by stolons. Very drought tolerant once established. Give good air circulation to reduce growth of powdery mildew. Benefits from occasional fertilization. May be propagated by root cuttings or division any time. A stunning groundcover and border plant, and a valuable early nectar source for pollinators.

Interesting Notes

Phlox stolonifera ‘Sherwood Purple’ has a mat-forming habit with masses of star-like, clear purple flowers and deep green foliage. A beautifully vibrant groundcover topping at 6” tall that will bring excitement to the shade or woodland garden and provide nectar to early season pollinators. While Mt. Cuba Center's Phlox Trials concentrated mostly on Phlox paniculata cultivars, ‘Sherwood Purple’ was given high marks for its habit, vigor, and floral display. P. stolonifera is different from P. divaricata by its adaptability to a range of conditions, its rounded foliage, and a slightly earlier bloom time.

Phlox stolonifera is found in chiefly mountainous regions such as in the Piedmonts and Appalachians from Pennsylvania to Ohio to Tennessee and Georgia in wooded areas and along shaded streambanks. Creeping phlox spreads steadily by spreading stolons and covers the ground in a shallow manner. It thrives in moist, acidic soils in part sun to shade with free-draining soils. For best results, deadhead flowers after springtime display and attempt careful late winter cleanup as rough raking can uproot the stolons of the plant. ‘Sherwood Purple’ is a particularly vigorous cultivar of this species.

A lovely groundcover, we particularly enjoy it as part of a living tapestry in the shade garden, interwoven with ferns, Phlox divaricata, and Carex. It does best when combined with P. divaricata in the garden to extend the springtime blooming. Flowers support sphinx moths, swallowtail butterflies, and hummingbirds. ‘Sherwood Purple’ is lovely in a shaded area of a rock garden, in a woodland garden, or along a shaded path.