It doesn't always have to be lawn: There are a variety of options for planting grass pavers, some even bloom - despite regular traffic. Below we have collected the best options for grass pavers for you.

It doesn't always have to be grass: other things also grow in grass pavers, often all by themselves

Green for the grass pavers

If you don't want to sow a boring, "normal" lawn, you can sow one of these pretty ornamental grasses, for example:

  • Horst red fescue
  • sheep fescue
  • Eyelash pearl grass

Flowering for the lawn pavers

If you not only want to green the lawn pavers, but also want to have them with flowers, you can buy special flower gravel lawns online or you can make a robust flower mixture yourself. The flowers must be robust and able to cope with very little nutrients. Native wildflowers are best for this; they are also hardy, so you don't have to reseed them every year.
These include the following flowers:

Surname flower color heyday
Mountain Sanddrop blue June to August
Edelgamander (sheepweed) pink May to September
heath carnation Strong pink, white or red June to September
Carthusian pink Strong pink June to September
Small or large brownelle Pink, white or violet June to October
Little hawkweed yellow May until October
Nodding catchfly White May to September
Crimson Stonecrop (Great Stonecrop) Pink to violet August to October
Round-leaved bellflower Blue, rarely white June to September
Wild thyme (Quendel) pink June to September
Hot Stonecrop (Hot Stonecrop) yellow June to August
sunroses Yellow, white, pink, orange May until October
small perennials Bluish June to August
Saxifrage Rock Pink White June to September
White Stonecrop (White Stonecrop) White June to September
Wild Marjoram Soft pink June to September

Earth between grass pavers?

Plants need soil to grow. But not all plants need the same amount of soil. You should choose plants that have the lowest possible nutrient requirements and can live on sandy soil. The plants in the flower gravel mixture only need 3 to 5% compost. The rest can be gravel.

The busier the entrance, the more difficult it is

If you have multiple cars driving over the sod pavers several times a day, it's going to be difficult for anything to gain a foothold there. Instead, you could fill the lawn pavers with beautiful pebbles. Or you can fill in the spots over which the wheels roll with pebbles and plant only the space between these two lines and to the side of them.

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