Thunder Landscape Home
GIANT LILYTURF
Liriope gigantea
Catalog
Design Ideas
Companion Plants
Landscape Size
Plant Benefits
Care Instructions
Plant Lore
History
Growth Conditions
Flowering
Attributes
Foliage

Click above to view photos
Photo Credit: Hort Printers
Item #: 5883
Category: PERENNIALS
Collections: Shade Garden Collection
Print Info Sheet
Catalog Description
Lush, dark green grass-like foliage is excellent for edging and borders in sometimes difficult shady areas. Small white flowers among the foliage are followed by metallic violet-blue fruit. Evergreen perennial. Filtered sun. Clump-forming plant with foliage 1½ to 3 feet tall. Division.
Design Ideas

Lilyturf is the workhorse of warmer shade gardens. Its strap-leaf foliage never grows beyond its designated size, which is perfect for city gardens or condominium communities. Thrives in courtyards and atriums, where soils remain perpetually moist. Uniform size makes it ideal for edging plants. Remarkably beautiful in dry streambeds or beside water gardens and fountains. Fits well into Asian-inspired schemes and as a texture contrast in Fern dells. Begs to be planted where its attractive flowers can be viewed up close.
Companion Plants

This big plant is a great alternative if you have had little success with Hosta.
Plant this dark-green variety with the bright Golden Japanese Forest Grass (Hakonechloa macra `Aureola`) and the vivid greens of giant Tasmanian Tree Fern (Dicksonia antarctica).
Use as an edging for a mass of fragrant Star Jasmine (Trachelospermum jasminoides).
Also works very well in informal drifts with contrasting texture of Heartleaf Bergenia (Bergenia x `Evening Glow`).

GOLDEN JAPANESE FOREST GRASS
Hakonechloa macra `Aureola`
TASMANIAN TREE FERN
Dicksonia antarctica
STAR JASMINE
Trachelospermum jasminoides
Average Landscape Size

Clump forming plant with foliage 1
½
to 3 ft. tall.
Key Plant Benefits

Lush, dark green foliage is excellent for edging and borders in sometimes difficult shady areas. Small white flowers among the foliage are followed by metallic violet-blue fruit. Evergreen perennial.
Care Instructions

Follow a regular watering schedule during the first growing season to establish a deep, extensive root system. For a neat appearance, remove old foliage before new leaves emerge. Divide clumps every 2 to 3 years in early spring.
Growth Conditions

Growth Rate
Moderate Growing
Growth Habit
Clumping
Heat Zones
High:
12 (>210 days)
Low:6 (>45 to 60 days)
Cold Hardiness
High:11 (Above 40 F) (see map)
Low:5 (-20 to -10 F)
Water Requirements
Water regularly, when top 3 in. of soil is dry.
Sun Exposure
Filtered sun
Flowering

Flower or Bloom description:
Spikes carry small clusters of spherical flowers
Flower Color
White
Flowering Time/Season
Spikes of white flowers in summer.
Propagation

Propagation Method
1
Division
Best time to Prune
No Value
Attributes

Berries
Border Plant
Clump Forming
Deer Resistant
Drought Tolerant
Easy Care Plant
Erosion Control
Firescaping Plant
Flowers for Cutting
Fruit-Bearing
Groundcover
Indoor Specimen
Oriental Garden
Rock Garden Plant
Shade Loving
Tolerates Acidic Soil
Water Garden
Woodland Garden
Foliage

Dark green, grass-like, arching
Foliage ShapeLinear
Normal foliage colorGreen
Underside foliageGreen
Juvenile foliageGreen
Mature foliageGreen
New foliageGreen
Spring foliageGreen
Summer foliageGreen
Fall foliageGreen
Winter foliageGreen
Plant Lore

In China, these plants are known as "book tape herb" and grown in every scholar's garden to use as book marks when paper was a once a very rare commodity.
Plant History

These natives of China were first described by Kaempher in 1712. The genus was later given by Portuguese Jesuit botanist missionary working in China, Juan Loureiro. The genus is named after the mother of Narcissos, Liriope. The species, named by Bailey refers to the Greek worked muschos, meaning fragrant. This group is closely related to genus Ophiopogon. Liriopes and Ophiopogons have been extensively cultivated in the deep south, particularly coastal regions where they substitute for lawn. They can be found on the grounds of many old estates, parks and plantation homes.
New Plant