![]() Try accompanying it with understory species like evergreen huckleberry, salal, osoberry, and native ferns - and other ground covers like stream violet, false Solomon’s seal, and Hooker’s fairy bells. If put in the right place, pacific bleeding heart will spread vigorously through rhizomes - and, occasionally, even produce a second bloom later in the season. Since many areas have different climatic temperatures and soil temperatures, the bleeding heart has the ability to grow in most weather conditions and soils. 4.6 billion years of evolution already created the perfect product and applies it for us, at just the right time. ![]() Gardening with Pacific Bleeding Heart: Try establishing a ground cover of pacific bleeding heart beneath native conifers or other trees like alder or vine maple, in areas that are moist and rich in organic matter and topped with a blanket of fine mulch, fallen leaves left in place or raked from one area of your garden to another.
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