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Growing Sedum: A Complete Beginner's Guide
Succulents & CactiAnfänger

Growing Sedum: A Complete Beginner's Guide

Learn how to grow Sedum (Stonecrop), one of the most versatile and easy-care succulents. This beginner guide covers basic care, variety selection, and perfect placement for groundcovers, rock gardens, and containers.

14 Min. Lesezeit
85 Gärtner fanden dies hilfreich
SG

Sarah Green

Horticulturist and garden expert with 15+ years of experience growing vegetables, herbs, and houseplants. Certified Master Gardener.

Introduction to Sedum

Sedum, commonly called Stonecrop, is one of the largest and most diverse succulent genera, with 400-600 species found across the Northern Hemisphere. The name "Sedum" comes from the Latin word "sedo" meaning "to sit," perfectly describing how these plants sprawl and sit atop rocks, walls, and poor soils where few other plants can thrive.

From the brilliant yellow flowers of creeping Sedum acre carpeting ancient stone walls to the majestic pink blooms of 'Autumn Joy' in perennial borders, sedums offer something for every garden situation. They're remarkably tough, thriving on neglect, poor soil, drought, and temperature extremes that would kill most plants.

Whether you want a living carpet of color, a rock garden showpiece, or a low-maintenance border plant, sedum delivers beauty with minimal effort.

Why Grow Sedum?

Incredibly Tough

Sedums evolved in harsh, rocky environments. They tolerate drought, poor soil, heat, and cold with remarkable resilience.

Low Maintenance

Once established, most sedums need almost no care. No regular watering, fertilizing, or fussing required.

Versatile Uses

From groundcovers to green roofs to border plants to containers—sedums fit almost any garden situation.

Year-Round Interest

Many sedums are evergreen, and their interesting foliage provides texture even when not in bloom.

Pollinator Friendly

Sedum flowers are excellent nectar sources for bees and butterflies, especially important in late summer and fall.

Easy Propagation

Sedums root effortlessly from cuttings, divisions, or even broken pieces—practically propagating themselves.

Types of Sedum

Creeping/Groundcover Sedums

Low-growing, spreading sedums perfect for:

  • Rock gardens
  • Stone walls
  • Pathway edges
  • Green roofs
  • Between stepping stones

Examples:

  • Sedum acre (Goldmoss) - Yellow flowers, very vigorous
  • Sedum album (White Stonecrop) - White flowers
  • Sedum spurium (Dragon's Blood) - Pink/red flowers, bronze foliage

Characteristics:

  • Height: 2-6 inches
  • Spread: 12-24 inches or more
  • Forms dense mats

Upright/Border Sedums

Taller sedums for perennial borders:

Examples:

  • 'Autumn Joy' - Pink to copper flowers
  • 'Matrona' - Pink flowers, purple-tinged foliage
  • 'Brilliant' - Bright mauve-pink flowers

Characteristics:

  • Height: 18-24 inches
  • Spread: 18-24 inches
  • Clump-forming

Quick Start Growing Guide

Basic Requirements

FactorRequirement
LightFull sun (6+ hours)
WaterMinimal—very drought tolerant
SoilWell-draining, average to poor
TemperatureZones 3-11 (varies by species)
HumidityLow—tolerates dry conditions

Simple Care Calendar

SeasonCare Notes
SpringPlant, divide if needed
SummerMinimal watering in extreme drought
FallEnjoy blooms, cut back if desired
WinterLeave for winter interest or cut back

Planting Sedum

Site Selection

  • Full sun (6+ hours daily)
  • Well-drained soil—critical!
  • Poor soil is fine (even preferred)
  • Slopes, raised beds, rock gardens ideal
  • Avoid wet, heavy clay

Soil Requirements

  • Well-draining above all else
  • Average to poor fertility preferred
  • Sandy or rocky soils excellent
  • Add grit to heavy soils
  • pH not critical (most types acceptable)

Spacing

TypeSpacing
Creeping6-12 inches apart
Upright18-24 inches apart

Planting Steps

  1. Prepare site with good drainage
  2. Dig hole same depth as root ball
  3. Plant at same level as in container
  4. Firm soil around base
  5. Water lightly to settle
  6. Mulch with gravel (not organic mulch)

Watering Sedum

The Golden Rule

Less is more. Sedums store water in their leaves and are far more likely to suffer from overwatering than underwatering.

Established Plants

  • Rain is usually sufficient
  • Water only in extreme, prolonged drought
  • Once every 2-3 weeks maximum in hot, dry conditions

New Plantings

  • Water sparingly until established
  • Check every week first month
  • Gradually reduce once growing well

Overwatering Signs

  • Mushy, rotting stems
  • Yellowing leaves
  • Leaves falling off
  • Crown rot

Light Requirements

Ideal Conditions

  • Full sun (6+ hours daily)
  • More sun = better flowers and color
  • Some tolerate part shade
  • Creeping types more shade tolerant

Light Problems

ConditionResult
Full sunBest color, flowers, compact growth
Part shadeOkay for some, reduced flowering
Too shadyLeggy, weak, few flowers

Temperature Tolerance

Cold Hardiness

  • Many sedums extremely cold hardy
  • Creeping types: often Zone 3 (-40°F)
  • Upright types: typically Zones 4-9
  • Check specific variety requirements

Heat Tolerance

  • Most handle heat well
  • Some prefer cooler conditions
  • Good air circulation helps
  • Avoid waterlogged soil in heat

Common Problems and Solutions

"Plant is rotting/mushy"

Cause: Overwatering or poor drainage

Solution:

  • Stop watering
  • Improve drainage
  • Cut away rotted portions
  • Replant in better-draining soil

"Plant is leggy and weak"

Cause: Too little light

Solution:

  • Move to sunnier location
  • Pinch back in spring to promote bushy growth

"Flowers are sparse or absent"

Cause: Too much shade or too rich soil

Solution:

  • More sun exposure
  • Stop fertilizing
  • Poor soil actually promotes flowering

"Plant spreading too aggressively"

Cause: Some sedums are vigorous spreaders

Solution:

  • Pull or dig out unwanted portions
  • Choose less aggressive varieties
  • Confine in containers

Easy Propagation

Stem Cuttings (Easiest)

Steps:

  1. Cut 3-inch stem sections
  2. Remove lower leaves
  3. Let dry 1-2 days
  4. Stick in soil or lay on surface
  5. Roots develop in 2-3 weeks

Division

Steps:

  1. Dig up clump in spring
  2. Cut through crown with sharp spade
  3. Ensure each piece has roots
  4. Replant immediately
  5. Water lightly

Leaf/Piece Propagation

For creeping types:

  1. Break off pieces with stem attached
  2. Place on soil surface
  3. They root where they contact soil
  4. Almost foolproof!

Creeping Types

Sedum spurium 'Dragon's Blood'

  • Deep red foliage
  • Pink-red flowers
  • Very hardy
  • Excellent groundcover

Sedum acre (Goldmoss)

  • Tiny green leaves
  • Bright yellow flowers
  • Very vigorous
  • Green roof favorite

Sedum album

  • Green to red foliage
  • White flowers
  • Dense mats
  • Extremely tough

Upright Types

'Autumn Joy'

  • Classic variety
  • Pink turning copper
  • Late summer/fall bloom
  • Excellent for pollinators

'Matrona'

  • Purple-tinged foliage
  • Pink flowers
  • Strong stems
  • 24 inches tall

Quick Reference Care Card

AspectRequirement
LightFull sun (6+ hours)
WaterVery minimal
SoilWell-draining, poor is fine
TemperatureVaries by type (Zones 3-11)
FertilizerUsually none needed
PruningCut back upright types in fall/spring
ToxicityMost non-toxic (some exceptions)

Troubleshooting Quick Guide

ProblemLikely CauseSolution
RottingToo wetBetter drainage, less water
LeggyToo shadyMore sun
Few flowersToo shady or too fertileMore sun, stop fertilizing
Spreading too muchVigorous varietyPull extras, contain
Winter damageToo wet in coldImprove drainage

Sedum rewards the laziest gardener with years of carefree beauty. The key is simple: excellent drainage and plenty of sun. Beyond that, these tough survivors practically take care of themselves.

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