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Thymus praecox Bressingham - Thyme

Thymus praecox Bressingham
Wild Thyme, Creeping Thyme

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Value-for-money
This groundcover thyme forms a very low, very dense mat, with a fine aromatic foliage that persists in winter. Its summer flowering is abundant, covering the plant with tiny pink flowers. Ideal in rockeries or in the joints of slabs and walls. Hardy perennial of lean, even dry soils, it requires full sun and perfectly drained soil.
Flower size
1 cm
Height at maturity
5 cm
Spread at maturity
40 cm
Exposure
Sun
Hardiness
Hardy down to -15°C
Soil moisture
Dry soil
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Best planting time March, September
Recommended planting time February to April, September to October
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Flowering time June to August
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Description

Thymus praecox Bressingham is a ground-covering thyme that is covered with pink, more or less purple flowers.  Also known as wild thyme, it is an excellent perennial groundcover for dry to arid soil, with abundant summer flowers that produce honey.  The plant forms a very low, very dense carpet, pleasantly fragrant and evergreen in winter. It disappears in summer under a myriad of small honey-flowering flowers. Ideal in rockeries or in the joints of slabs and walls, this creeping thyme grows slowly, but is not afraid of drought or cold, in well-drained and poor soil. 

Native to Western Europe, the early thyme belongs to the Lamiaceae family. In nature, it is found in dry and arid places, especially on limestone and sandy soils. The Bressingham cultivar forms a very dense, 10 cm (4in) high foliage carpet and 30 to 40 cm (12 to 16in) wide. Its tiny oval, leathery, hairy foliage covers flexible, prostrate stems that root at the nodes, so that the plant spreads laterally over time. Numerous essential oil glands are visible under a magnifying glass on the leaves. Its scent is slightly less pronounced than that of common thyme, but more refined. Flowering occurs from June to July-August depending on the climate. Very small flowers, more or less purple, grouped in dense whorls, bloom in spherical cymes at the ends of the year's shoots, attracting many pollinating insects. Like many Mediterranean plants adapted to drought, thymes develop a double root system, consisting of a central taproot, with a fundamental role, which sinks deep into the soil or into cracks in rocks, and a superficial network of very long rootlets capable of capturing the slightest surface moisture. 

Thymus praecox Bressingham is decorative all year round and it is very hardy when planted in perfectly drained or even arid soil. Its low-growing, spreading habit makes it an ideal plant for filling joints in paving, cracks and tops of walls, or the edges of a stone staircase, especially as it tolerates moderate foot traffic well. It covers the ground in a dry land plant bed like lavender, rockroses, shrubby salvias, dwarf wormwood, cotton lavenders or rosemarys. It also thrives in a very sunny rockery, keeping company with Aubrieta canescens, basket-of-gold or silver. It is also used as a condiment: its leaves are highly appreciated in cooking. Used alone or in a bouquet garni, combined with bay leaves, parsley and rosemary, thyme leaves flavor stews, sauces, marinades and court-bouillons. They are also used in infusions, known to relieve digestive ailments. A sun-loving plant, thyme is also planted in dry borders or in pots, which allows it to be kept close to the kitchen…

Flowering

Flower colour pink
Flowering time June to August
Inflorescence Cyme
Flower size 1 cm
Fragrance slightly scented
Bee-friendly Attracts pollinators

Foliage

Foliage persistence Evergreen
Foliage colour medium green
Aromatic? Fragrant foliage when creased
Foliage description Herbaceous, powerful and spicy fragrance.

Plant habit

Height at maturity 5 cm
Spread at maturity 40 cm
Growth rate slow

Botanical data

Genus

Thymus

Species

praecox

Cultivar

Bressingham

Family

Lamiaceae

Other common names

Wild Thyme, Creeping Thyme

Origin

Mediterranean

Product reference183691

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Planting and care

Thymus praecox Bressingham is well adapted to the alpine Mediterranean climate. It requires a perfectly drained soil to withstand the harshness of winter, preferably sandy, poor, even limestone and stony. It is undemanding, but dreads very humid and very cold winters in heavy soil. Plant it after the last frosts and in September-October in hot and dry climates. It cannot thrive without sunshine and likes to have warm roots. When planted in overly rich soil, it becomes weak and lacks fragrance. Plant it in a raised bed, enriched with gravel, in a rock garden, in full sun, against a south-facing wall, on a stony or sandy slope, in any substrate that does not retain moisture, which would be fatal to it in winter. It is preferable to prune the stems after flowering to maintain a compact habit. It may be necessary to replant it every 3 years, as the centre of the tillers tends to become bare, especially in fertile soil.

Regularly pruning them (on young wood), and after flowering, allows them to age better and remain compact.

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Planting period

Best planting time March, September
Recommended planting time February to April, September to October

Intended location

Suitable for Rockery
Type of use Edge of border, Container, Slope, Vegetable garden
Hardiness Hardy down to -15°C (USDA zone 7b) Show map
Ease of cultivation Amateur
Planting density 8 per m2
Exposure Sun
Soil pH Neutral, Calcareous
Soil type Chalky (poor, alkaline and well-drained), Stony (poor and well-drained)
Soil moisture Dry soil, Well-drained, sandy, stony.

Care

Pruning instructions Trim the end of the flowered young shoots to give the plant a more compact and branching habit. Regular pruning throughout the year also helps to give a nice shape to this thyme.
Pruning Pruning recommended once a year
Pruning time July to September
Disease resistance Good
Overwinter Can be left in the ground

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