Best Ground Covers for Heirloom
2 ground cover varieties well-suited for heirloom varieties. Open-pollinated heritage cultivars with unique flavor.

Creeping Thyme
Creeping Thyme is a low-growing ground cover herb that forms dense, spreading mats ideal for rock gardens, pathways, and borders. This heirloom variety matures in 90-95 days and reaches just 6-12 inches tall with delicate, fine-textured foliage. Unlike culinary thyme varieties, it offers a milder, more subtle thyme flavor, making it better suited for ornamental use and gentle seasoning. Hardy and drought-tolerant, it thrives in full sun with well-drained, sandy or rocky soils, even tolerating poor soil conditions. Its prostrate growth habit and ease of care make it an excellent low-maintenance ground cover for gardeners of all skill levels.

Sweet Woodruff
A charming woodland perennial that forms dense mats of star-shaped whorled leaves topped with delicate white flowers in late spring. When dried, the leaves release a sweet vanilla-hay fragrance that has been treasured for centuries in potpourri and traditional May wine. This well-behaved spreader is perfect for naturalizing in shade gardens and won't overwhelm neighboring plants like some ground covers.
Why These Ground Covers Work for Heirloom
Heirloom varieties are open-pollinated cultivars passed down for generations — prized for complex flavor, storied history, and seed-saving potential. These varieties let you save seeds and grow the same crop next year.