How Often Should You Water Creeping Jenny?

Creeping jenny is a herbaceous perennial characterized by small bright green leaves. Despite its invasiveness, growing creeping Jenny in containers allows you to enjoy this perennial without worrying about it taking over your entire flower bed or backyard.

How Often to Water Creeping Jenny?

As with other plants, the best way to tell if your creeping jenny plant needs water is to check the topsoil. If the top half-inch is still moist, you don’t need to add any water yet. If it’s dry, feel free to water the plant. Creeping Jennys can be watered daily or every 3-4 days, water them based on how the soil feels. 

How to Tell if Creeping Jenny Needs Water?

The finger checking soil test is reliable when if you’re ever wondering if your plants need more water. For the creeping jenny, you just have to see if the top half-inch is moist. If it, you can postpone adding water to the plant.

creeping jenny on rock

How Do You Know When Your Creeping Jenny is Sufficiently Watered?

This plant thrives in moist and humid conditions and takes little effort from the grower to thrive. If the area is hot and dry, it will need watering and may not develop as well if it is not given adequate shade.

Creeping jenny is a plant that is like water up to one inch deep. It’s a suitable contender for a marginal plant in your water garden. While it does like moist soil, you don’t want to place it in a container that doesn’t have a drainage hole. You also should never allow the pot to just soak in a saucer filled with water. This could lead to fundal problems.

Can You Overwater Creeping Jenny?

Unlike many other plants, creeping jenny is pretty resistant to overwatering. However, it is not invulnerable, and while it can take an overwatering beating now and then, the idea is to keep its soil moist and not soggy.

What are Signs of an Overwatered Creeping Jenny?

Most plants will change their foliage when they are overwatered. That includes potential brown spots, leaves turning yellow, and especially a plant that looks sick because it has developed root rot.

Is It Tough to Grow Creeping Jenny?

The maintenance of the creeping jenny plant is minimal once it has been established. Pruning this fast-growing plant is a common gardening practice to keep it from spreading too far horizontally.

Divide the plant in early spring to improve air circulation or limit its spread. Just a bit of organic fertilizer is all that is needed when planting creeping jenny for the first time. A layer of mulch or compost around a plant might help it retain water.

Read our related post “How Long Does Potted Creeping Jenny Last?” here. 

How Much Sunlight Does Creeping Jenny Need?

You should grow this plant in full sunlight to light shade. In full sun, expect to see golden yellow leaves, and in partial shade, they will be chartreuse green. The afternoon sun in hot climes can make the leaves blanch.

Why Is My Creeping Jenny Turning Yellow

Why Is My Creeping Jenny Turning Yellow?

Sun exposure may be causing your plants’ leaves to turn yellow. Sunburn can occur even if these plants flourish in sunny locations. Keep the plants out of direct sunlight during the warmest part of the day. As an alternative, you may keep the plants in the partial shade all year round or use a shade net to prevent them from drying out.

Southern blight, a fungal disease that can cause creeping Jenny to become yellow, is another possible cause. The fungus’ roots are made up of a web-like structure called hyphae. The fungus eats away at the stems of plants, making them more vulnerable if they’ve been damaged physically or are exposed to too much shade.

Read our related articles: 

Leave a Comment