New Moon Nurseries


Search by Characteristic

USDA, NRCS. 2012. The PLANTS Database (http://plants.usda.gov, 11 October 2012). National Plant Data Team, Greensboro, NC 27401-4901 USA.

Polemonium reptans

Jacobs ladder

Native to North America


CHECK AVAILABILITY

FIRST IMPRESSIONS:  Polemonium reptans is a lovely spring ephemeral wildflower that forms 12-18” tall clumps.  Leaves are pinnately divided into a feather-like arrangement of 7-21 oblong leaflets.  In spring the soft green foliage is crowned by loose branched clusters of bell shaped pinkish or sky blue flowers.  Jacob’s Ladder is a fine groundcover for woodlands or shade gardens with moist well drained soil.

HABITAT & HARDINESS:  Polemonium reptans occurs in eastern Ontario and Quebec and through most of the Eastern United States west to Minnesota, Oklahoma and Mississippi.

This species is indigenous to rich deciduous woodlands, stream and river banks, wooded slopes and bases of sandstone canyons.  Plants are generally found in high quality woods shaded by deciduous trees.

Plants are hardy from USDA Zones 3-8.

PLANT DESCRIPTION:  Polemonium reptans is a sprawling rhizomatous perennial groundcover. Plants have a short vertical crown and many fibrous roots.

The attractive leaves are alternately arranged on green or purplish stems.  They appear to be compound but are actually pinnately divided into inch long oval or oblong segments.  Each segment has a pointed tip and smooth edge.  The entire leaf averages 8-9” length.

The fertile stems terminate in loose open flower corymbs.  The individual florets are bell shaped and about ½” across.  Each floret has 5 rounded blue-violet or pinkish petals.

Blooming occurs in late spring for 2-3 weeks.  Small oval tan colored seed capsules follow. 

Plants grow 12-18” tall with an equal spread.  Even though plants have short rhizomes, they spread mostly by reseeding.

CULTURAL & MAINTENANCE NEEDSPolemonium reptans flourishes in bright shade with moist rich loamy soil.  Plants tolerate sandy soils, acid or alkaline pH and some sun if abundant moisture is present. 

This species has little drought tolerance and will often go dormant if insufficient moisture is present.

Plants are fairly pest resistant and are not palatable to deer.

If sited in an ideal site with partial shade and moist soil, this species will often produce an abundance of seedlings.

LANDSCAPE USES:  Polemonium reptans provides attractive foliage and Showy Blooms for the Woodland or Shade Garden.  It is an appealing Groundcover, Grouping or Mass for a Wildlife Garden.  This species is appropriate for Cottage Gardens, Pollinator Gardens, Low Maintenance Plantings, Perennial Borders and is a useful Butterfly Nectar Plant.

COMPANION & UNDERSTUDY PLANTS:  Try pairing Polemonium reptans with Aquilegia canadensis, Carex albicans, Carex plantaginea, Heuchera americana 'Dales Strain', Dryopteris marginalis or Polystichum acrostichoides.

Phlox divaricata is a relative with similar flower color and culture that could be substituted in some situations. 

TRIVIA:  A wide variety of native bees and honeybees sip nectar from the blossoms.  Flowers are also visited by butterflies, skippers and moths. 

The common name refers to the pairs of opposite leaf segments that somewhat resemble the rungs of a ladder.  In a Biblical story, Jacob dreamed of a ladder that connected Heaven and Earth.

Sometimes known as “abscess root” due to the historical use of the dried rhizomes to treat skin conditions, coughs, bronchitis and insect or snake bites.

Along with the many Phlox spp., this species belongs to the family Polemoniaceae commonly known as the Phlox Family or Jacob’s Ladder Family.


Height:

12-18 in

Spread:

12-18 in

Spacing:

24 in

USDA Hardiness Zone:

3-8

Bloom Color:

Blue

Polemonium reptans Characteristics

Attracts Wildlife

  • Pollinators

Attributes

  • Rain Garden
  • Naturalizing
  • Favorite
  • East-Coast Native
  • Bog

Exposure

  • Full Shade to Partial Shade

Deer Resistant

  • Deer Resistant

Flowering Months

  • May

Foliage Color

  • Green

Juglans nigra Tolerance (Black Walnut)

  • Yes

Season of Interest (Foliage)

  • Summer
  • Spring

Soil Moisture Preference

  • Moist to Wet

Interesting Notes:

For more information on this plant, visit the USDA PLANTS Database: http://plants.usda.gov/java/profile?symbol=pore2


Plants that work well with Polemonium reptans ''

White-tinged sedge White-tinged sedge (Carex albicans)
Seersucker sedge Seersucker sedge (Carex plantaginea)
Dales alum root Dales alum root (Heuchera americana 'Dales Strain')

Substitutions for Polemonium reptans

Woodland Phlox Woodland Phlox (Phlox divaricata)