western dichondra

My par­ents knew a good deal when they saw one. The house they pur­chased in the South­ern Cal­i­for­nia ‘burbs had the required num­ber of bed­rooms, fruit trees in the back, a lawn for the kids to play on, and was located half-way between their jobs. The front yards in the neigh­bor­hood were well main­tained but not splashy.

Some of the houses on the other side of the nearby main boule­vard, how­ever, had immac­u­late high-maintenance gardens–and prob­a­bly had gar­den­ers to go with them. One of the ground­cover choices that some of those houses sported was a dark green dichon­dra lawn, smooth and uni­form as the felt on a pool table. These were lawns that didn’t tol­er­ate much foot traf­fic, required lots of weed­ing, heavy sum­mer water and were meant mainly for show. Com­pared to our lumpy, spiky lawn, these dichon­dra tableaux seemed like the stuff that dreams are made of. (We never would have con­sid­ered that dichon­dra is con­sid­ered a weed in many parts of the country.)

western-dichondra-on-bricks

Jump ahead lots and lots of years to my cur­rent house. Every now and then in one of the raised beds I’d see a plant vol­un­teer under­neath some shrubs or around some bulbs. It sure looked like dichon­dra, but for a long time I thought I wasn’t IDing the plant correctly.

As it turns out the plant really is a dichon­dra, and it’s actu­ally one of the uncom­mon native plants found in coastal sage scrub, chap­ar­ral and oak wood­land habi­tats. The local species, Dichon­dra occi­den­talis, is dis­tinct from the clas­sic lawn plant–one of the sub­tle dis­tin­guish­ing char­ac­ter­is­tics being the sil­ver or brown hairs on the stems. But it’s still a dichon­dra, and I thought its was pretty cool that one of the plants that I’d fetishized grow­ing up some­how man­aged to find me as an adult.

western-dichondra-and-narcissus-shoots

The dichon­dra has self-sowed itself into a cou­ple spots around the house. It now forms a wel­come ground­cover in this raised planter, where a few months ago the nar­cis­sus were break­ing through the soil…

bletilla-striata-alba-with-western-dichondra

…and this is today, with white Chi­nese ground orchids, Bletilla stri­ata alba, bloom­ing away in their bed of soft dichondra.

If you don’t want to wait for the plant to show up on its own, sev­eral Cal­i­for­nia native plant sup­pli­ers offer Dichon­dra occi­den­talis, though it’s def­i­nitely one of the less pop­u­lar items. The plant seems best for me in part-shade. It can take the sum­mer off if you don’t water it, but bi-weekly sprin­klings have kept it around year-round for me, though in sum­mer it’s a lit­tle sparse. But as much as I hate to admit it, I also have a hard time look­ing glam­orous all the time, so I’m will­ing to give this plant a break…

April 10 2009 | Categories: gardeningmy gardenplant profiles | Tags: | 4 Comments »