Description
- 🍃All My Seeds Are 100% Fresh And Processed With The Highest Quality & Care.
- 🍃Hydrocotyle, sometimes called water pennywort, Indian pennywort, marsh penny, thick-leaved pennywort and even white rot is a genus of prostrate, perennial aquatic or semi-aquatic plants formerly classified in the family Apiaceae, now in the family Araliacea
- 🍃Easily grown in humusy, consistently moist soils in full sun to part shade. Tolerates full shade. May be grown as a marginal aquatic plant in mud at the side of a pond or water garden or in up to 2” of standing water.
- 🍃Hydrocotyle vulgaris, commonly called pennywort, is a ground cover for moist to wet areas. Stems clad with round, peltate, short-stalked leaves (3/4” to 1.5” diameter) with scalloped edges float in very shallow water or creep along the ground, rooting at the nodes as they go. Purplish-green flowers are inconspicuous, appearing in 2-5 flowered umbels among the leaves from June through September. Grows 2-6” tall but spreads indefinitely. Many of the leaves are penny-size, hence the common name.
- 🍃Easy And Fast Growing With Basic Maintenance, They Blend Well With Grass And Look Very Pretty Just By Themselves.
Hydrocotyle Vulgaris Hydrocotyle vulgaris, also known as marsh pennywort, common pennywort, water naval, money plant, lucky plant or copper coin, is a small creeping perennial aquatic herb native to N. Africa, Europe, the Caucasus and parts of the Levant. Common Name: pennywort Type: Herbaceous perennial Family: Araliaceae Native Range: Northern Africa, Europe Zone: 6 to 10 Height: 0.25 to 0.50 feet Spread: 1.00 to 20.00 feet Bloom Time: June to September Bloom Description: Purplish-green Sun: Full sun to part shade Water: Medium to wet Maintenance: Low Suggested Use: Ground Cover, Naturalize, Rain Garden Flower: Insignificant Tolerate: Heavy Shade, Wet Soil