Ajuga: weed of woe
I've never cared much about managing a lawn. The reward/effort ratio seems backwards to me. In fact, I harbor a conspiracy to reduce and replace grassy areas with (you guessed it) more garden. We on the home management committee periodically debate this topic.
When I happened upon it in a plant catalog, my viney newcomer got a name: Bugleweed (ajuga reptans). This dainty looking plant is for sale!
Check out Dave's Garden - people buy it, sell it, trade it and propagate it! Please don't.
It continued to spread.
Discovering the verdant pest
One spring, around ten years ago, I discovered a new member of lawn flora with a viney habit and spikes of small, blue flowers. Like everything else in the lawn, this was not my doing. It began to spread.
Spiky blue flowers of Bugleweed (ajuga reptans)
Consequences of ignorance
As I ignored it, the ajuga was emboldened to form denser patches, entirely displacing the turf in some spots. Still, lawn is lawn. What, me worry? But then it turned nasty. Its runners crossed the sacred boundary between lawn and garden and never looked back. It had my attention now. "Invasive" is too genteel a word for this mindless marauder.
Bugleweed (ajuga reptans) thrives in my lawn and garden
While driving on Water Street in Pembroke today, I spied a sign: “FLOWERS $1.00”.
In small pots on a table were clumps of ajuga!! Run – FAST!!
And shake the mud off yer shoes when you get home!
i am sitting in my yard digging them up listening to my iPad and googling ajuga and crazily thinking I can just dig it up one patch at a time-silly me, but at least I m outside enjoying the unusually warm weather and tomorrow I will bake the little buggers on my basketball court and get at least a little pleasure-short-lived tho it will be!
Carrie – I think you’ve captured the spirit of it precisely. Digging, googling, baking and little pleasures. About the best you can do with ajuga. My sympathy and encouragement. – mw