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Verbena plant pretty, tough

Tapien verbenas offer equally impressive toughness and beauty. They may be the ultimate groundcover with their dense carpet of green foliage topped with gorgeous flowers most of the summer.

The perennial verbena truly has come of age in the landscape during the last decade. Standards like the Homestead Purple and Biloxi Blue have been recognized for their outstanding performance.

To me the Tapien verbenas still rank up there with these and offer equally impressive toughness and beauty. Tapien verbenas were hybridized in Japan by the same breeders that brought us the Surfinia petunias.

Despite the influx of new series like the Temari, Aztec, Babylon and Magellana, the Tapien have held their place in the market. The series, which started out with four, now boasts 10 colors.

The Tapien verbena may very well be the ultimate ground cover, with its dense carpet of green foliage topped off by gorgeous flowers most of the summer. This group of verbenas is highly resistant to powdery mildew. The foliage is deep green and feathery in appearance, almost resembling carrots or parsley.

The plant is a prolific flower producer and is heat resistant. In other words, it blooms all summer through fall especially if it is cut back periodically to regenerate growth and blooms. It is considered perennial — withstanding as low as 14 degrees. I have even had mine come back in hanging baskets that were exposed.

The plant is low growing, reaching only six to eight inches in height and spreads with ease. It will root at each node along the branches or stems, so you will want to plant on 18- to 24-inch centers, as your bed is sure to fill in fast.

Plant yours in full sun for best flowering, but some shade will not hurt them. It is super in hanging baskets, containers, window boxes or anywhere a cascading plant is needed.

For the landscape, Tapien will work planted as a border plant and very well on slopes. They also are showy enough to be pocket planted among rocks.

Tapien verbenas are drought tolerant when planted in the ground. In a container, you will need to keep them slightly moist at all times. When grown as a ground cover or border plant, fertilize once a month with a complete fertilizer that is slightly higher in nitrogen, such as a 12-6-6. If planted in containers or window boxes, feed them every two weeks with a water-soluble fertilizer.

Your companion options are limited only by your imagination. One show-stopping display is to plant the new Purple Tapien as the border plant in front of New Gold or Lucky Pot of Gold lantana. The colors will resemble the look of a Mardi Gras parade.

Another great combination is using the Pink Tapien with dwarf fountain grass or purple fountain grass. Try planting them in urns or ginger-jar shaped containers with New Wonder scaevola and then something erect like a salvia or geranium.

Tapien verbenas' low-growing habit and border plant requirement also make them a good plant for attracting butterflies. You will find the swallowtails and silver-spotted skippers visiting throughout the season.

If the Tapien creeps beyond your boundary, prune them as needed. In fact, it will respond favorably to pruning.

Horticulturist Norman Winter is the author of "Paradise Found: Growing Tropicals in Your Own Backyard." Readers may write to him at normanwext.msstate.edu.

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