Creeping Snowberry
Symphoricarpos mollis
Care
part shade
low
Fast, Medium, Slow; Tolerates a variety of soils.
1–2ft tall , 3–4ft wide
Mar-Aug
Deciduous
Resistant
Friendly
Coastal scrub and oak woodland of the Coast Ranges from Marin County to San Luis Obispo County, below 2000 ft elevation
Care Guide
Planting
Plant creeping snowberry in fall or winter in a spot with partial shade, though it tolerates everything from intense sun to constant shade. It's extremely flexible about soil - fast, medium, or slow drainage all work fine. Space plants according to your intended use; this deciduous shrub grows 1–2 feet tall and works well as a groundcover, bank stabilizer, or lawn alternative, so adjust spacing based on how quickly you want coverage.
After Planting
Water weekly for the first summer to establish the plant, then cut back to once monthly by late summer. Once established (typically by year two), stop irrigating entirely - this is a chaparral native that thrives on rainfall alone in the Bay Area. In winter, you can cut back the plant if needed; it's deciduous so it will naturally drop leaves and go dormant. The biggest mistake is continuing to water into the second year; creeping snowberry actually prefers dry conditions once established, and overwatering is far more likely to kill it than drought.
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Endangered & Threatened Species Supported
Sitka bumble bee, declining populations
Wildlife Supported
Insects
larval host plant; caterpillars feed on foliage
spring pollen source for hive provisioning
early season nectar source for colony establishment
spring and early summer foraging
summer nectar source
mid to late summer pollen collection
early season nectar and pollen foraging
early spring pollen source for nesting females
+3 more species