Weitere Beispiele werden automatisch zu den Stichwörtern zugeordnet - wir garantieren ihre Korrektheit nicht.
It is less common than its relative, Ajuga reptans (common bugle).
Most gardeners are familiar with species that tend to be invasive in the garden, like Ajuga reptans, sometimes called carpet bugle.
Ajuga reptans (I)
Popularly known as Yellow bugle or Ground pine, the plant has many of the same characteristics and properties as Ajuga reptans.
Ajuga Jungle Beauty and Ajuga reptans - I love ajugas anyway, and both of these are irresistible.
A Carpet of Roses, and More THESE are some other good ground covers: Ajuga reptans (bugle).
The multi-colored cultivars such as Pink Beauty, Atropurpurea, Multicoloris and Rubra are more decorative than the commonly grown Ajuga reptans.
Ajuga reptans, commonly known as bugle, blue bugle, bugleherb, bugleweed, carpetweed, carpet bungleweed, common bugle, is an herbaceous flowering plant native to Europe.
Ajuga reptans, Bugle Rampante, Bugula, Carpenter's Herb, Middle Comfrey, Middle Confound, Sicklewort.
The horticulturist Allan Armitage cites the "insidious disease of 'buglelawn,' " which strikes wherever gardeners attempt to edge a lawn with the popular ground cover Ajuga reptans, or common bugle weed.
Darker hues range from the deep chocolate-purple foliage of the cherry plumb tree, Prunus cerasifolia 'Nigra', to the low, mat-forming Ajuga reptans 'Braunherz', a perennial with rich blue flower spikes that contrast vibrantly with its bronzy purple leaves.
Ajuga genevensis is a less common relative of Ajuga reptans, the Common bugle, though it is common for the two plants to interbreed, as well as with Ajuga pyramidalis, the pyramidal bugle, producing hybrid offspring that are very similar.