Position
Full sun




Thymus
VAT included · plus
Your outdoor plant has just been packed, transported and unpacked, so give it a calm start before planting or placing it permanently. Remove all packaging carefully, check the pot, stems, visible roots and substrate moisture, and settle any loose growing medium back around the root ball. Water if the root ball feels dry, but do not leave the pot standing in water. For the first few days, keep the plant in a sheltered spot suited to its light needs, away from strong midday sun, heavy wind, frost and heat stress.
Do not move the plant straight into full exposure, especially if it is young, newly flushed, evergreen, recently pruned or greenhouse-grown. Gradually introduce more sun, wind and temperature variation over several days. If cold nights, storms, intense sun or hot dry weather are expected, keep the plant protected until conditions are more stable. Do not fertilize immediately after delivery; let the plant settle first and resume feeding only when it is actively growing and conditions are suitable.
Outdoor plants may arrive in different seasonal stages. Depending on the time of year, your plant may be leafy, flowering, newly sprouting, recently pruned, dormant, partly bare or leafless. Adjust care to what the plant is doing: actively growing plants need closer moisture checks, while dormant plants usually need protection from extremes and only light moisture management until growth resumes.
Plant outdoors when the soil is workable and weather conditions suit the plant type. Avoid planting during frost, heatwaves, waterlogged soil or very dry windy periods. It is better to keep the plant protected in its pot for a short time than to plant into stressful conditions. After planting, water thoroughly so the root ball and surrounding soil connect properly, then monitor moisture while the plant establishes.
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Evergreen herbaceous subshrub
Position
Full sun
Moisture
Dry to average
Drainage
Free-draining
Hardiness
Fully hardy · -15°C
Mature size
5–10 × 30–50 cm
Winter habit
Evergreen
Bloom time
Summer
Containers
Good in pots
Pruning
After flowering, Spring
Dry, sunny banks and rocky ground in Europe.
Thymus praecox 'Red Carpet' is a low evergreen thyme for warm, open sites where drainage matters. It makes a close creeping mat with tiny scented leaves and a stronger flower colour for sunny edges. It gives small aromatic leaves all year and deep pink to red summer flowers in summer. It suits sunny edges where the red flower sheet can sit close to stone, gravel or a shallow planter rim.
The value is in scale. The mat usually stays around 5 to 10 cm high, with a spreading outline that can reach around 50 cm where conditions are open. Its low stems thread across gravel and small gaps, giving a coloured summer carpet at ground level. Containers keep 'Red Carpet' smaller and slower than open ground, which keeps the red flower sheet easy to manage in small displays.
'Red Carpet' performs cleanly where sun reaches the crown and rain leaves the surface quickly. The tiny evergreen leaves keep the mat neat around gravel, raised bed edges and low troughs. Open sun supports denser growth, while lean soil keeps the red-flowered mat firmer. A gritty mineral root zone helps the flower stems stay compact and close to the foliage.
Use Thymus praecox 'Red Carpet' for red-flowered groundcover, gravel pockets, low path edging and shallow alpine-style containers. It also fits troughs and shallow bowls where its low habit keeps the rim visible for this red-flowered thyme. A visible mineral surface around the crown helps the plant sit cleanly after rain and keeps the planting visually crisp for this red-flowered thyme.
Neutral to alkaline soil suits thyme, especially when the structure is open. Chalk, sandy loam, gravelly beds and gritty potting mixes are good starting points for this red-flowered thyme. In clay gardens, raised pockets and troughs give the roots the sharper drainage they prefer for this red-flowered thyme. Open drainage matters more than rich fertility for this red-flowered thyme.
The red bloom colour is most visible when several plants meet across a sunny pocket. A small amount of organic matter is fine for establishment, but the long-term root zone should stay open and low in water retention for this red-flowered thyme. Dense compost produces lush shoots, weak scent and a crown that ages faster for this red-flowered thyme. Top-dress with fine gravel after planting to keep stems lifted from wet soil for this red-flowered thyme.
For containers, water only when the upper 35 to 45% of pot depth feels dry. Then water evenly and let the pot drain for this red-flowered thyme. Newly planted thyme needs a short settling-in period with regular checks, but established plants prefer a dry rhythm between rain or watering for this red-flowered thyme. In winter, sharp drainage is the main form of protection for this red-flowered thyme.
In open ground, water during establishment and then rely on the site to do most of the work for this red-flowered thyme. On a bank or wall top, check young plants during dry wind until roots grip the planting pocket. A plant that wilts in dry heat usually perks up after deep watering, while a plant with blackened inner stems often points to poor drainage around the crown for this red-flowered thyme.
Light handling or warm sun on the foliage releases a clean thyme aroma. The foliage releases a clean thyme scent when brushed, adding a sensory detail near paving. Flowering usually comes in late spring to summer, depending on the cultivar and local weather for this red-flowered thyme. The flowers are small, but a wide mat can create a visible colour sheet for several weeks, especially when planted in groups for this red-flowered thyme.
Evergreen foliage means the plant still marks the bed in winter for this red-flowered thyme. Growth slows in cold weather, and older inner stems can look woody with age for this red-flowered thyme. Replanting small divisions or rooted pieces every few years keeps a dense patch going where a crisp carpet is important for this red-flowered thyme.
After the main flowering period, shear or pinch lightly to remove faded stems and keep the mat dense. Cut into leafy growth and leave the woody base intact for this red-flowered thyme. Spring tidying can remove winter-worn tips, while summer trimming keeps paths, trough rims and edging lines neat for this red-flowered thyme. Fresh shoots then fill the top of the plant with a cleaner texture for this red-flowered thyme.
Take only small sprigs if needed, because the main value here is low colour and scent. If clipped for the kitchen, take only soft active tips and let the mat fill back in. Creeping thymes serve best as scented groundcover and flower mats, with common thyme carrying the main kitchen role.
Open centres usually come from age, shade or wet winter crowns. Yellowing, patchy dieback or a hollow centre usually comes from wet roots, heavy soil, old woody growth or too much shade for this red-flowered thyme. Brown edges after winter often mean the plant sat wet during cold weather for this red-flowered thyme. Lift the crown, improve drainage, trim lightly after flowering and keep nearby plants from covering the mat for this red-flowered thyme.
Thymus praecox 'Red Carpet' is a small plant, so placement matters. It works best at the front of a bed, in a trough, near steps, along a dry path edge or in a sunny herb planter for this red-flowered thyme. Give it sun, air and lean drainage, and it becomes a neat scented layer as a neat low-maintenance scented layer for this red-flowered thyme.
In a gravel pocket, place this red-flowered thyme where the colour can spread around a stone edge or spill slightly over a low wall. The strongest effect comes from several plants spaced to meet gradually, leaving small gaps for air while they settle. In containers, refresh the top layer with grit after trimming so young shoots stay clean and the mat does not become buried under old flower stems.
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