How to Get Rid of Creeping Charlie (2024)

Gardening

Plant Problems

Weeds

Keep this invasive weed out of your lawn and prevent it from coming back

By

David Beaulieu

How to Get Rid of Creeping Charlie (1)

David Beaulieu

David Beaulieu is a landscaping expert and plant photographer, with 20 years of experience.

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and

Les Engels

How to Get Rid of Creeping Charlie (2)

Les Engels

Les Engles achieved Master Gardener through theCamden County Extension of the Rutgers Master Gardeners Program. He is an arboretum curator with over 30 years of experience. He describes himself as a "tree-hugging dirt worshipper" who is a member of multiple gardening societies and foundations.

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Updated on 04/08/23

Reviewed by

Barbara Gillette

How to Get Rid of Creeping Charlie (3)

Reviewed byBarbara Gillette

Barbara Gillette is a Master Gardener, herbalist, beekeeper, and journalist. She has 30 years of experience propagating and growing fruits, vegetables, herbs, and ornamentals.

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In This Article

  • What Is Creeping Charlie

  • Identification

  • Ways to Get Rid of Creeping Charlie

  • Timing

  • Hand-Pulling

  • Using an Herbicide

  • Preventing Creeping Charlie From Returning

  • Value to Pollinators

  • Frequently Asked Questions

Project Overview

  • Working Time: 1 - 2 hrs
  • Total Time: 2 - 3 hrs
  • Skill Level: Intermediate
  • Estimated Cost: $0 to 30

If you have the invasive groundcover creeping Charlie in your yard, it's likely you want to remove it. Native to Europe, it was introduced to North America in the 1800s as both an ornamental and a medicinal plant. Now, it has proliferated into a hard-to-kill lawn weed. Creeping Charlie readily spreads from its seeds, roots (or rhizomes), and stems that root at the nodes. Here's how to get rid of creeping Charlie plants.

How to Get Rid of Creeping Charlie (4)

What Is Creeping Charlie?

Creeping Charlie is an invasive groundcover that can quickly choke out grass and ornamental plants. Glechoma hederacea goes by several other common names including ground ivy, alehoof, and catsfoot. This ground-hugging plant is an aromatic evergreen and a close relative of mint. It's a perennial—meaning it lives more than two years—that thrives in moist and shady areas, though it also tolerates some sun.

Identifying Creeping Charlie

Creeping Charlie has a square stem that varies in length from a few inches to 2 feet long. Its leaf color ranges from dark green to purple. The plant grows purple funnel-shaped flowers and spreads to form a dense mat that's low to the ground (i.e., agroundcover).

Creeping Charlie is sometimes mistaken as creepingJenny, the common name forLysimachia nummularia. At a glance, the two weeds look alike. But on closer inspection, you'll see that creeping Charlie's leaves have scalloped edges while creeping Jenny's leaves do not. Creeping Jenny flowers are yellow.

How to Get Rid of Creeping Charlie (5)

Ways to Get Rid of Creeping Charlie

There are two ways to get rid of creeping Charlie: hand pulling and killing it with herbicide. Each method has its own pros and cons.

Hand pulling involves manually pulling creeping Charlie out of the ground by its roots, over and over and over again. The appeal of this method is that the only part of your yard and garden that is impacted is the creeping Charlie. You won't be killing or harming any other plant in the process.

An herbicide application will also kill creeping Charlie. It's a fast and effective method that is much less labor intensive, but it can also kill other things in the area, or you could end up spraying your organic vegetable garden by accident.

Hand-Pulling Creeping Charlie

  • Best for small patches

  • May have to re-weed often

  • Can select what you weed

  • Affordable

  • Labor intensive

  • Safest removal method for people, pets, and pollinators

Killing Creeping Charlie With Herbicide

When to Get Rid of Creeping Charlie

Depending on your level of infestation and your chosen removal method, it's best to get rid of creeping Charlie in either the spring or fall.

For small patches, hand-pulling in the spring before the plant has flowered is recommended as an initial eradication attempt. Hand-pulling will kill creeping Charlie but not grass, and it's a pet-safe method to get rid of creeping Charlie. However, it often requires several attempts throughout the season to fully eradicate the plant.

If you decide to use an herbicide, do so in the fall when the plant has reached its prime and before it sends out seeds. An herbicide is typically a more effective method to permanently get rid of creeping Charlie plants. Select a day when there will be little wind, and make sure it won't rain or snow within 24 hours of application.

Warning

One home remedy for killing creeping Charlie plants involves a solution of Borax. However, this method has fallen out of favor. Unless you use scientific precision in mixing and applying the solution, you can end up with a case of boron toxicity in your soil.

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25 Low-Maintenance Ground Cover Plants for Sun and Shade

What You'll Need

Equipment / Tools

  • Gardening gloves
  • Pruners
  • Garden hose
  • Spade or pitchfork
  • Weed tool
  • Protective eyewear
  • Pump sprayer for herbicide

Materials

  • Lawn waste bags
  • Herbicide
  • Piece of cardboard (optional)

Instructions

Hand-Pulling Creeping Charlie

Hand-pulling is one of the most common—and pet-safe—ways to get rid of creeping Charlie. You'll likely have to repeat the process to permanently get rid of creeping Charlie plants if you see new growth emerging, but the upside is you won't kill your grass in the process like chemical methods can.

How to Get Rid of Creeping Charlie (6)

  1. Trim the Leaves and Stems

    Trim the leaves and creeping stems from the plant with your gardening shears, leaving just enough above the ground to pull with your hands. Place the trimmings in a lawn waste bag.

    How to Get Rid of Creeping Charlie (7)

  2. Soak the Area

    Using a garden hose, soak the area with the creeping Charlie. Make sure to thoroughly saturate the soil, and wait about 30 to 60 minutes before proceeding.

    How to Get Rid of Creeping Charlie (8)

  3. Loosen Soil

    Loosen the soil with a pitchfork to expose some of the roots and rhizomes (little white roots).

    How to Get Rid of Creeping Charlie (9)

  4. Remove the Roots

    Grasp the plant at its base, and pull up to remove the roots. If the roots are particularly deep, rework the soil with the pitchfork, so you can remove them all in one pull. Place the entire plant and its roots in the lawn waste bag.

    How to Get Rid of Creeping Charlie (10)

  5. Inspect the Area

    With a garden trowel or weed tool, inspect the area for any leftover rhizomes and remove them. Removing all the rhizomes you see will make any subsequent elimination efforts easier.

    How to Get Rid of Creeping Charlie (11)

Killing Creeping Charlie With Herbicide

An herbicide or weed-control product can kill creeping Charlie the best, especially if the patch is too large to hand-pull. You can opt for a method that effectively gets rid of everything in the area, but that means it will kill your grass and you'll have to restart your lawn from scratch. Or you can selectively spray the creeping Charlie with a lawn-friendly product, following the manufacturer's directions. An herbicide that contains dicamba or 2,4-D will usually be successful for killing creeping Charlie.

  1. Mix Herbicide With Water

    Place the herbicide into a pump sprayer, and mix it with water per the manufacturer's instructions. Be precise. Too much product can harm your soil, and too little might not kill the creeping Charlie plants. Use protective eyewear and gloves when handling chemicals.

    How to Get Rid of Creeping Charlie (12)

  2. Spray

    Spray the herbicide onto the creeping Charlie, concentrating on the leaves and stems and allowing the solution to soak down to the roots. Be careful of overspray, so you don't hit any nearby foliage you want to keep.

    If creeping Charlie appears in flower beds or adjacent to ornamental plants, use a large piece of cardboard to shield your garden plants from overspray.

    How to Get Rid of Creeping Charlie (13)

  3. Leave the Area Alone

    Leave the treated area for winter. Then, in the spring rake up any leftover weed debris. Till and amend the soil with a nitrogen-fixing natural fertilizer. Then, replant or reseed your lawn.

    How to Get Rid of Creeping Charlie (14)

How to Prevent Creeping Charlie From Coming Back

If you're hand-pulling creeping Charlie, check the area at least weekly for regrowth. Pull it out and dispose of it as you see it. The more you can disrupt the plant's growth and stop it from getting nutrients, the easier it will be to prevent the creeping Charlie from coming back.Moreover, if you're going the herbicide route, you can use a pre-emergent weed killer in the spring to help prevent regrowth.

It's also important to maintain a healthy lawn to give it a better shot at fighting encroachment from creeping Charlie plants. Ensure that your grass is cut to an appropriate height and is sufficiently watered and fed throughout the growing season.

If grass doesn't grow well in a particular area—because of too much shade or poor drainage, for example—look for plants that thrive in those conditions. This can help to prevent creeping Charlie from moving in.

Tips for Getting Rid of Creeping Charlie

When hand-pulling, remember that even the tiniest piece of rhizome left behind will eventually shoot up as a new plant.In most cases, creeping Charlie will likely return after the first hand-pulling. So keep an eye on the area to catch new plants as soon as possible. It takes determination, but eventually you will wear down the creeping Charlie and permanently get rid of it.

For the chemical control of creeping Charlie in lawns, use a selective broadleaf weed killer that works specifically on creeping Charlie. And make sure the product is suitable to use onthe variety of grass you grow. Many broadleaf weed killers can be applied more than once in a season with a minimum waiting period between applications. Furthermore, observe the recommended waiting period before reseeding a lawn or starting any other plants after using a chemical product. Avoid starting edible plants in the area unless your product specifically says it's safe for them.

Tip

You can try killing creeping Charlie with vinegar if you want to take a more natural method. Mix 2 parts vinegar to 1 part water in a spray bottle, and spray it all over the plant. Vinegar helps to get rid of creeping Charlie by causing foliage dieback. However, creeping Charlie is a notoriously tough plant and will likely regrow from its roots. So to get rid of creeping Charlie permanently, you'll likely need multiple applications of vinegar in conjunction with some hand-pulling.

Creeping Charlie’s Value to Pollinators

Creeping Charlie does not offer a lot of value to pollinators, but the fact that a large patch of creeping Charlie often has a significant amount of buzzing in the air will make you think it is a beneficial plant.

Creeping Charlie does not uniformly contain much nectar, but its growth brings about the "lucky hit" method of pollination. In a patch of creeping Charlie, the one remaining flower that was not suffocated by the creeping Charlie will account for all the nectar in the area. A bee can rely on one lucky hit in a creeping Charlie patch to get all the nectar it needs, rather than going from flower to flower in another location, getting a little bit at a time. A bee will then spend a good amount of time looking for that lucky hit before it finds the plant, hence all the extra buzzing in one area.

Additionally, creeping Charlie pollen is not readily bioavailable to bees and other insects that would (if they could access it) rely on it as a main source of protein. This, combined with the tendency for creeping Charlie to overcrowd any other plants from an area, leaves pollinators without a pollen source.

The best way to support pollinators is with biodiversity and providing a variety of choices to feed off of; creeping Charlie does not allow that to happen.

FAQ

  • Is creeping Charlie hard to kill?

    Creeping Charlie is hard to kill and keep out of the garden. Creeping Charlie is a broadleaf plant that is not affected by all broadleaf herbicides, making killing it difficult. It also spreads by numerous methods, so even if a gardener believes it is controlled, there is a good chance it isn't.

  • Is creeping Charlie an invasive plant?

    Creeping Charlie is highly invasive. If left unchecked in a garden or open space, it will spread and overtake most other plant life.

  • Is creeping Charlie good for anything?

    Though creeping Charlie is now considered an invasive weed, it was originally introduced because it made an amazingly attractive and useful groundcover. Creeping Charlie still makes a great groundcover if you can manage it.

How to Seed a Lawn From Scratch

As a landscape enthusiast with a comprehensive understanding of gardening and plant-related topics, I can confidently delve into the content of the article discussing the invasive weed, Creeping Charlie, and its management techniques.

The article addresses various facets related to Creeping Charlie, an invasive groundcover that poses challenges in maintaining lawns and ornamental plants. Creeping Charlie, scientifically known as Glechoma hederacea, is native to Europe and was introduced to North America in the 1800s. It's characterized by its square stem, dark green to purple leaves with scalloped edges, purple funnel-shaped flowers, and its ability to spread rapidly through seeds, roots (rhizomes), and stems rooting at the nodes.

The piece primarily focuses on identification, eradication, prevention, and the plant's impact on pollinators. It distinguishes Creeping Charlie from similar-looking weeds like Creeping Jenny (Lysimachia nummularia) based on leaf morphology and flower color.

Methods for eliminating Creeping Charlie are discussed in detail, emphasizing two primary approaches: hand-pulling and using herbicides. Hand-pulling involves physically removing the plant by its roots, which is labor-intensive but minimally impacts surrounding vegetation. On the other hand, herbicide application offers a quicker and more effective solution but might harm other plants if not applied carefully.

The article stresses the importance of timing when dealing with Creeping Charlie—hand-pulling recommended in spring before flowering and herbicide use suggested in the fall before seed dispersal. Additionally, it cautions against using home remedies like Borax due to potential soil toxicity.

Preventative measures include consistent monitoring and disruption of plant growth, using pre-emergent weed killers, maintaining a healthy lawn, and selecting plants suited for specific environmental conditions.

Moreover, the article touches upon the limited value Creeping Charlie provides to pollinators despite its abundant growth, explaining its inefficiency as a nectar or pollen source due to its crowding behavior, ultimately hindering biodiversity beneficial for pollinators.

In summary, the content addresses various aspects related to Creeping Charlie, offering comprehensive guidance on identification, eradication, prevention, and its ecological impact. It includes detailed instructions for both manual removal and chemical control methods, along with tips, warnings, and frequently asked questions regarding this invasive plant.

How to Get Rid of Creeping Charlie (2024)
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