From: jeffs@telerama.lm.com (jeffs) Subject: Re: Flourishing Violets -- Help! Date: 19 May 1994 09:53:54 -0400 > I know that with mint, you are supposed to plant in a > bucket... otherwise it spreads everywhere. This might work... I *like* violets for several reasons, but they *do* spread and crowd out other plants. I don't know how many varieties of violets there are, but I'm talking about wild violets indigenous to Pennsylvania. These seem to be especially hardy and adaptive to different soil/shade conditions.... and survive transplanting well. I have transplanted "plugs" of these violets from along a stream to different parts of our lawn. After I learned how well they crowd out some other plants, I tried several means to control them & found that simple borders worked to contain them. Apparently, although the root structure of the violet "clump" is massive in relation to the stems/leaves--the roots never go very deep! I think that ALL the propagation in my lawn/gardens has been from spreading/creepers rather than by seed. The propagation is stopped by placing flat stones around the clump (sandstone, in my case) or by a narrower border (old lumber, garden edging) which has been "set" to a depth of two inches or so below the surface. I don't know why, but burying most/all of the edging seems to work also! The spreading must be via roots instead of above-ground creepers. I tried to chop potential spreading roots (by stabbing a round-point shovel vertically around clumps, in a ring around the clump perimeter) to inhibit spreading, but this had little effect! If you consider the hardiness/spreading of violets to be a "positive" trait, like I usually do--use them as ground cover around already established perennials. They have filled in around our roses so well that we never (rarely) have to weed the bed!