Ankle-High Plants
Plants reaching 6 to 12 inches tall occupy the critical transition zone between groundcovers and taller perennials, creating textural interest and filling gaps in layered plantings. In nature, these species thrive in partially shaded woodland edges and prairie understories where their moderate height allows them to capture filtered light while remaining protected by taller neighbors. In the garden, use ankle-high plants like spring flowers, sedges and short prairie grasses as edging plants, woodland groundcovers, and front-of-border specimens that add depth without blocking views of taller plants behind them.
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Prairie Smoke (Geum Triflorum) -
Jacob's Ladder (Polemonium Reptans) -
Blanket Flower (Gaillardia Aristata) -
Golden Ragwort (Packera Aurea) -
Prairie Alumroot (Heuchera Richardsonii) -
Hairy Beardtongue (Penstemon Hirsutus) -
Path Rush (Juncus Tenuis) -
Nodding Onion (Allium Cernuum) -
Midland Shooting Star (Dodecatheon Meadia) -
Harebell (Campanula Rotundifolia) -
Pretty Sedge (Carex Woodii) -
White Tinged Sedge (Carex albicans) -
Plantain Sedge (Carex Plantaginea) -
Mad Dog Skullcap (Scutellaria Lateriflora) -
Blue Grama (Bouteloua Gracilis) -
Canada Anemone (Anemone Canadensis) -
Appalachian Sedge (Carex Appalachica) -
Virgina Waterleaf (Hydrophyllum Virginianum) -
Penn Sedge (Carex Pensylvanica) -
Many-flowered Woodrush (Luzula Multiflora) -
Old Field Goldenrod (Solidago Nemoralis) -
Deflexed Bottle-brush Sedge (Carex Retrorsa) -
Balsam Ragwort (Packera Paupercula) -
Rosy Sedge (Carex Rosea)