How to plant vinca minor?

  1. Buy vinca secondary seeds from an online supplier. Although you may be able to find sources at local gardening stores, the supply is usually not consistent. Your best bet is to check the suppliers online. Packages of seeds cost about $5 for 25 seeds.
  2. Fill pots with 2.36 inches (6.0 cm) of moss or seed starting mix. In diameter, these pots should be 2 to 3.5 inches (5.1 to 8.9 cm). Moss is a form of partially decomposed soil that is highly water saturated. It is ideal for vinca minora, which thrives in warm, fresh, moist soil.
  3. Depending on size and brand, local department and gardening stores sell moss bags for between $10 and $40.
  4. Most quick pots are made from peat moss and wood pulp and are 100% biodegradable. You can find them at local gardening stores or online suppliers for as little as $1 for a 10-pack.
  5. Place the sharp utensils in a metal bowl of water. Fill the container with 5.1-10.2 cm of water. Exposing them to prolonged contact with water causes them to swell – once completely hydrated, you can put them in a regular container.
  6. Place the swollen peat into deep plastic pots 2.36 inches (6.0 cm). Once the moss swells from absorbing the water, immediately place it in a plastic container. Leaving peat pots in water after they boast can lead to fungus growth.
  7. Sprinkle young vinca seeds over the peat. Lay them on top of soil and then cover them with about 0.25 in (0.64 cm) or less peat moss. Gently tap the ground with your hands.
  8. Use a spray bottle to spray the top of the soil with water after applying it to the seeds.
  9. Wrap each bowl in a ziplock bag or cover it with plastic wrap. Open the Ziploc bag and place each container in it from the top opening. Pour a little water into the vase using a small cup, close the Ziploc bag, and put it on the window sill.
  10. Ziploc bags trap moisture and help seeds germinate.
  11. If you don’t have Ziploc bags handy, you can plant the seeds under a glass container. It would help if you started by lining the bottom of the gravel container to drain, placing the plant on top of it, and then covering the container with its lid. It should be put in a bright place away from direct sunlight to avoid generating too much heat.

Planting Time

It is best to plant myrtle in early spring, before the blooming season. However, it is a hardy plant and tolerates cultivation until mid-fall. It spreads quickly, with roots developing at the nodes where it touches the soil. Creeping myrtle produces tube-shaped blue-purple flowers that are 1 inch or less in diameter in spring, and they continue to bloom through summer and into early fall. The well-established plant grows in small mounds, about 6 inches high, providing ground cover over a bed planted with the seasonal bulbs or around the base of a tree.

Transplanting Window

When established, you can quickly propagate the creeping myrtle – they are easy to split and spread throughout your garden. Plant this aggressive runner in early spring, before it begins to bloom, or in late fall, after flowering has ended. It tolerates part pf the sun to full shade and is adaptable to different conditions in your garden. It is also deer-resistant and tolerates rocky or poor soils.

Caution

Myrtle can be invasive, smother other plants in a bed, or spread to nearby areas, including lawns. However, it’s not as intrusive as its more vigorous cousin, periwinkle large (Vinca major), which grows in USDA zones 7 through 9, and you should not plant it. If you don’t want it to take up part of your garden, plant it near a feature you check growing, such as a concrete driveway, sidewalk, driveway, or water feature. If it enters an area of garden where you don’t want it to grow, shake it hard, remove all runners and carefully remove all root systems. If necessary, use an herbicide to stop its progression.

Vinca minor common name

Vinca minor (common names periwinkle or dwarf periwinkle) is a species of flowering plant in the Dogban family, native to central and southern Europe, from Portugal and France north to Holland and the Baltic states, from the east to the Caucasus, as well as in the southwest. Asia in Turkey. Other vernacular names used in agriculture include minor periwinkle, the common pure periwinkle, and sometimes in the United States, myrtle or creeping myrtle.

Synonyms

  • Pervinca heterophile
  • Pervinca minor
  • Pervinca procumbens
  • Vinca acutiflora
  • Vinca ellipticifolia