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Tiny creeping Hypericum japonicum with minuscule yellow flowers on damp ground
Hypericaceae12 July 202612 min

Hypericum japonicum: complete guide

Hypericum japonicum

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Overview

Hypericum japonicum, sometimes called matted St John's wort or Japanese St John's wort, is a tiny, creeping herb in the St John's wort family (Hypericaceae) with one of the largest natural ranges of the entire genus: from the Indian subcontinent, through China, Japan, and Korea, to Southeast Asia, Australia, and New Zealand. Unlike the better-known, shrubby St John's wort species found in most gardens, this is a low, mat-forming plant of damp, marshy ground, streambanks, and wet meadows. It is poorly suited to the average ornamental border, but for enthusiasts of bog gardens, pond margins, and paludariums, Hypericum japonicum is a surprising and underrated little plant. On gardenworld.app, this species is occasionally mentioned as an addition to the wet zone of a naturalistic pond edge, alongside more familiar marginal plants. Across much of Asia the plant has also traditionally been gathered as a folk herb, underscoring the centuries-old, widespread familiarity of this modest species within its native range, even though that use plays no role in the European garden.

Appearance and bloom

The plant forms a finely branched, creeping to slightly ascending mat only 5 to 15 cm tall, with thin, four-angled stems and small, round to egg-shaped leaves barely 0.5 to 1 cm long. From June through September, minuscule bright yellow flowers just 4 to 6 mm across appear, either solitary or in small, loose clusters at the stem tips. Despite their tiny size, the flowers carry the same characteristic five petals and tufts of fine stamens typical of the whole St John's wort genus, giving the plant a surprisingly delicate detail on closer inspection. After flowering, small capsules form containing countless dust-fine seeds, allowing the plant to self-seed readily in moist ground.

Ideal location

Hypericum japonicum grows best in full sun to light partial shade on permanently moist to wet ground, exactly the opposite of most other St John's wort species, which actually prefer drought. Think of the edge of a pond, a bog bed, a soggy low spot in the garden, or even the damp substrate of a paludarium or terrarium. In an ordinary border with normal, free-draining garden soil, the plant will quickly disappear due to lack of water. The ideal spot therefore combines plenty of light with permanently moist to wet conditions, such as the shallow zone right next to a pond edge where the soil never fully dries out. When designing a new bog garden or natural pond through gardenworld.app, this shallow transition zone between water and dry lawn is often specifically reserved for small, creeping species like this one, precisely because they take up little room yet still deliver flowers in spots where larger marginal plants would be far too dominant.

Soil

The soil for Hypericum japonicum can and should stay moist to waterlogged; good drainage, essential for most other St John's wort species, is simply not needed here. A nutrient-poor to moderately fertile, slightly acidic to neutral soil (pH 5.5 to 7.0) with a high organic content, such as peaty or marshy ground, suits this species best. When planting at a pond edge or in a bog bed, aquatic potting mix, or a blend of garden soil with sphagnum peat and some river sand, works well. Avoid limy, strongly alkaline soil, since the plant naturally grows in more acidic, wet ground.

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Watering

Watering Hypericum japonicum is really the opposite problem from most garden plants: the soil should never dry out. At a pond edge or bog bed with a naturally high water table, supplemental watering is rarely needed except during exceptionally dry spells when the water level drops. In a pot or tub without a natural water supply, the soil must be checked daily and topped up as needed, since even a few days of dryness can already damage the shallow roots of this small plant. Rainwater is preferable to hard, limy tap water.

Pruning

Hypericum japonicum requires almost no pruning thanks to its small, creeping growth habit. At the end of the season, typically in October, the dead above-ground growth can be removed or simply left in place as natural mulch and a seed source for the following year. In a neatly designed bog garden, excess growth can occasionally be trimmed back to prevent the plant from being overwhelmed by more vigorous neighbours such as bulrush or great sedge.

Maintenance calendar

March-April: Check for new seedlings, keep the water level in the bog garden topped up.

May-June: Active growth, no extra feeding needed on healthy, organic bog soil.

July-September: Peak flowering, monitor the water level closely during dry summer spells.

October: The plant largely dies back after setting seed, dropping seed onto moist ground for next season.

November-February: Winter dormancy, no specific care needed in a well-functioning bog garden.

Winter hardiness

In most northern European gardens, Hypericum japonicum behaves as a short-lived, self-seeding species rather than a reliably overwintering perennial. Given its enormous natural range, from tropical Southeast Asia to the cooler Kuril Islands, winter hardiness varies considerably by source population, but in practice the above-ground plant disappears in Dutch and German gardens after the first hard frost. Thanks to its abundant seed production, the species usually returns naturally in spring within a permanently moist bog garden, so winter protection is generally unnecessary.

Companion plants

In a bog garden or pond margin, Hypericum japonicum pairs well with other low, moisture-loving species such as water mint (Mentha aquatica), marsh marigold (Caltha palustris), and small sedge species (Carex). For added height and structure, bulrush (Typha) or yellow flag iris (Iris pseudacorus) can be planted behind it, while Hypericum japonicum fills the moist foreground as a fine, flowering carpet. For paludariums and terrariums, the species is also sometimes combined with mosses and small ferns, its creeping habit naturally covering the substrate of a damp terrarium without crowding out taller plantings. Avoid pairing it with strongly competitive, fast-growing marginal plants, since this small St John's wort offers little resistance against them. Find more pond and bog planting ideas at gardenworld.app.

Closing

Hypericum japonicum is not a plant for the average border, but for anyone wanting to enrich a pond margin, bog bed, or paludarium with a fine, natural-looking carpet of tiny yellow flowers, this widespread Asian-Australasian species is a surprising find. Care comes down to one simple principle: keep the soil permanently moist and the rest follows naturally. Thanks to its modest size and unusual preference for wet ground, this species fills a niche that most other St John's wort species actively avoid, making it a valuable addition for anyone assembling a complete, layered bog planting scheme. Discover more distinctive water and bog garden plants for your garden at gardenworld.app.

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