SKU: 55106461532
can phlox be planted in pots

can phlox be planted in pots Emerald Blue Creeping Phlox

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Description

can phlox be planted in pots Emerald Blue Creeping PhloxMagnificently eye popping! The Emerald Blue Creeping Phlox (Phlox subulata "Emerald Blue') is an ideal ground cover with dark blue flowers and a thick mat of semi evergreen foliage. Emerald Blue may also be called Creeping Phlox or Moss Phlox. Blooming from April to May, it is a great addition to any perennial garden. The attractive lavender blue blooms fit in with any and every color in your garden making it stand out amongst the crowd. Most of that

Magnificently eye-popping! The Emerald Blue Creeping Phlox (Phlox subulata "Emerald Blue') is an ideal ground cover with dark blue flowers and a thick mat of semi-evergreen foliage. Emerald Blue may also be called Creeping Phlox or Moss Phlox.

Blooming from April to May, it is a great addition to any perennial garden. The attractive lavender-blue blooms fit in with any and every color in your garden making it stand out amongst the crowd. Most of that crowd will be hungry early emerging pollinators and visiting Hummingbirds in the spring!

Emerald Blue is deer resistant making your life a lot easier! On top of that, the flowers are also perfumed! This plant can be described as dense, low-growing, and mat-forming as it spreads to form a flowering carpet of beauty! Cold and heat-tolerant throughout USDA growing zones 3 -9, Creeping Phlox can reach a 6-12 inch height and 2-3 feet low-growing width.

Planting and Application:

No more days of boring and dull spots in your garden because this flower is ready to bring life and brightness to your garden. Your garden expectations are about to be completely blown away! Cottage gardens, Children's Garden, Bulb Gardens, Perennial Borders, and Pollinator gardens all benefit greatly from these darling waves of spring pinwheels! Even containers and planters gain a vivid spring spiller!

Use your Emerald Blue Creeping Phlox in rock gardens, as a spread over curbs and short retaining walls, or in difficult edges of dry streambeds. These vivid perennials look great rambling through a Rock Gardens or Crevis Garden or as living mulch/groundcover. Plant along the edges of a hot sunny walkway or path, or along the edges of sun garden beds and borders! Even slopes and hard-to-mow hillsides in the sun gain a carpet of erosion slowing beauty!

  • Blue Flowers With a Dark Blue-Purple Eye
  • Masses of Tiny Blue Flowers on 6" Groundcover
  • Dark Purple Eye in Each Flower
  • Incredible in Mass Planting
  • Adored by Beneficial Pollinators

#ProPlantTips for Care:

Emerald Blue Creeping Phlox needs to be planted in a full sun area in well-drained soil for the best growth possible. Provide moderate yet consistent moisture for new plants their first year, but after, these plants are very self-sufficient. Provide moisture during times of drought and extreme heat, and to further help with moisture retention, add a 3-4 inch thick layer of mulch over the soil surface. Prune/shear mounds immediately after flowering and remove up to a third of the top growth for a clean start.

  • Full Sun
  • Well-Drained Enriched Soil
  • Moderate Moisture
  • Prune After Flowering
  • Very Easy Care

This flowering perennial is positively striking in the spring and will effortlessly make a difference in your landscaping. Order your very own striking Emerald Blue Creeping Phlox today! This is a fan favorite and won't last long!

Explore More from Nature Hills

Emerald Blue Creeping Phlox is an excellent choice among perennials and groundcovers for creating vibrant spring displays in challenging areas. This hardy selection thrives in zone 3 plants, trees & shrubs collections and pairs beautifully with other drought tolerant options for low-maintenance landscapes. For design inspiration and growing tips, explore our guides on Creeping Phlox: Carpets Of Color For Your Garden! and Classic Colors Blue & Purple Flowering Perennials.

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SKU: 55106461532

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4.2 ★★★★★
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Hay1212
Houston, US
★★★★★ 5
Perfect for homeschooling!
Format: Paperback
Just finished up reading this as part of our homeschooling curriculum this year. What a gem this book is! Both my boys (9 & 13) were super interested in it and it kept their attention. Great way to learn about Indigenous cultures and traditions through story. Highly recommend!
WAS THIS REVIEW HELPFUL?YesReportShare
Reviewed in the United States on January 19, 2026
B
Verified Purchase
Braunschweig
Port Orchard, US
★★★★★ 5
This was a favorite fourth grade class book club book during a study of Native Americans.
Format: Paperback
This year my fourth grade class read the book Children of the Longhouse as a book club book. They were divided into groups of 4 and 5, and each day they would prepare a section of the book to read, and discuss it. Then the leader that day of each group shared what they thought. I don't want to spoil the story, but we were examining the relationships that the characters and the community in the book had to nature, and my students loved that. They found it interesting to learn about the beliefs, and that the challenges people had to face and overcome. They loved the climax and the ending too. Characters that they had felt were "bad guys" led to discussions of what options people in another culture might have which would necessitate them doing things that seem bad to us, like disobeying adult advice. I love the way this book fleshes out a pre European existence in the Northeast that helps us picture what life might have been like in an Iroquois village. We love the role that LaCross plays. My students use the Iroquois word for it. I pointed out the glossary at the back with pronunciations for Mohawk words, and my students loved using them and would even discuss how to correctly pronounce them. The book introduced my students to many ideas that they had never been exposed to, and they cared about the characters a lot. They also loved discussing the book more in an in depth way, and then hearing what other groups had had to say. I was interesting how similar the things that each group shared were. We can see that we need to shift our attitudes and be more connected to the natural world all around us.
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Reviewed in the United States on December 17, 2019
D
Verified Purchase
David
Belleville, US
★★★★★ 5
museum quality
Format: Paperback
This is a kid's book, which is well illustrated, and useful. I have worked as a storyteller in schools. Kids of all backgrounds love native stories! All of Joseph Bruchac's books are high quality, museum pieces, just really good, the apotheosis [ideal] of what a storybook could be like. gives a very good description of the native lifeways around stories, and gives another view of native storytelling. is another book that gives you native context, by an author who also has native storybooks in print, including . Entering into native lifeways is not necessarily judgeable by white man culture, as shows. One thing one notices in native cultures is that they ask new questions, something like one sees in . I find native metaphysics to be similar to Quantum Mechanics. While not a native book, gives some ideas on how life would work, from that perspective. has stories about tricksters, which are not dissimilar to native stories. teachingdrum.org used to have a list of books of native stories, which is the most comprehensive I've seen. That is a nonprofit, and I have no connection with them, this cites the info resource only. All storytelling is fascinating. is one example of European stories about animals, which are not totally dissimilar. Stories are fascinating. If you want to entrance, train, entertain, educate, and improve children, nothing is faster or easier than storytelling.
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Reviewed in the United States on April 28, 2012
S
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sswan
Massapequa, US
★★★★★ 4
Great gift for a new teacher
Format: Paperback
Bought this book for a new teacher building up her book collection for her new classroom. It was a hit!
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Reviewed in the United States on December 24, 2021
A
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Amazon Customer
New York, US
★★★★★ 5
Wonderful book for many reasons
Format: Paperback
I recommend this book for its story, cultural accuracy, and high interest action. First it is an exciting story of how conflicts arise and can be resolved with an exciting lacrosse game at the end. How cool is that? But the cultural and historical details make this a fascinating read for all ages. If you want to know about the lives of Native Americans in the New York area, written by a Native American, and put into an historically accurate story, this is a great read. I would recommend this as a high interest type of reader for middle school readers, one that would challenge them as well. The story could be about conflicts today, but the action is naturally more intense. If you are looking for an accurate portrait of Native American life, Bruchac is a wonderful author for you to choose. It is hard to find good books about northeastern Native Americans.
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Reviewed in the United States on October 12, 2013

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