Dodatkowe przykłady dopasowywane są do haseł w zautomatyzowany sposób - nie gwarantujemy ich poprawności.
We find it increasingly difficult to grow pachysandra under this tree.
Ever since that day, I've hated pachysandra with a passion.
Those who have large beds of pachysandra might take this recommendation to heart.
About the only location where pachysandra has trouble thriving is in full sun.
For that, there are many more interesting plants than pachysandra and ivy.
Now, I'm thinking of starting an "anything but pachysandra or ivy" club.
Since there is grass and pachysandra on the sides, I am afraid to use any chemicals.
A second option is to buy flats of pachysandra at garden centers.
This usually happens when the pachysandra is covered by tree leaves, which are not cleared away in late fall.
What causes 30-year-old pachysandra to turn brown and die.
AT times it seems as if I were the only member of the "anything but pachysandra" group.
Then he dropped to all fours and disappeared into the pachysandra.
As a last resort there is pachysandra, which can grow almost anywhere, unfortunately.
Then the pachysandra will go into winter free of its smothering blanket.
The deer ate everything this winter, even the pachysandra and the ivy.
A fungus disease does trouble pachysandra and many other groundcovers.
The pachysandra is not diseased but showing evidence of a severe winter.
I have tried pachysandra, but it only thrives on the outer southern exposure.
This will give the pachysandra plants the aeration they need to winter through safely.
This uncovering may be all that is needed to free the pachysandra and encourage it to grow.
Is there anything as tough as pachysandra or ivy but less common and more interesting?
In other words, the pachysandra was stressed out.
Even ivy, pachysandra and myrtle, the big three, can become pests.
When these land planners can't come up with another suggestion for covering the ground, there is nothing like pachysandra to win the client over.
The best way to tell if fungus is the problem is to look closely at the pachysandra itself.