North America Native Plant

American Alpine Speedwell

Botanical name: Veronica wormskjoldii var. wormskjoldii

USDA symbol: VEWOW

Life cycle: perennial

Habit: forb

Native status: Native to Alaska âš˜ Native to Canada âš˜ Native to Greenland âš˜ Native to the lower 48 states  

Synonyms: Veronica alpina L. var. alterniflora Fernald (VEALA5)  âš˜  Veronica alpina L. var. cascadensis Fernald (VEALC)  âš˜  Veronica alpina L. var. geminiflora Fernald (VEALG)  âš˜  Veronica alpina L. var. nutans (Bong.) B. Boivin (VEALN)  âš˜  Veronica alpina L. var. terrae-novae Fernald (VEALT2)  âš˜  Veronica alpina L. var. unalaschcensis Cham. & Schltdl. (VEALU)  âš˜  Veronica nutans Bong. (VENU2)  âš˜  Veronica stelleri Pall. ex Schrad. & Link var. glabrescens Hultén (VESTG)  âš˜  Veronica wormskjoldii Roem. & Schult. ssp. alterniflora (Fernald) Pennell (VEWOA)   

American Alpine Speedwell: A Hardy Native for Rock Gardens and Alpine Landscapes If you’re looking for a tough, cold-hardy native plant that can handle challenging conditions while adding delicate beauty to your garden, American alpine speedwell (Veronica wormskjoldii var. wormskjoldii) might just be your new best friend. This unassuming little ...

American Alpine Speedwell: A Hardy Native for Rock Gardens and Alpine Landscapes

If you’re looking for a tough, cold-hardy native plant that can handle challenging conditions while adding delicate beauty to your garden, American alpine speedwell (Veronica wormskjoldii var. wormskjoldii) might just be your new best friend. This unassuming little perennial forb packs a surprising punch when it comes to resilience and charm.

What is American Alpine Speedwell?

American alpine speedwell is a low-growing perennial forb – essentially a non-woody plant that dies back to the ground each winter but returns faithfully each spring. Unlike its showier garden cousins, this speedwell is built for survival in some of the harshest conditions on the continent.

This plant goes by several scientific synonyms, reflecting its complex taxonomic history. Botanists have shuffled it around quite a bit over the years, but it has settled comfortably into the Veronica genus where it belongs.

Where Does It Grow Naturally?

Talk about a world traveler! American alpine speedwell is native across an impressive range that includes Alaska, Canada (Alberta, British Columbia, Ontario, Quebec, Yukon, Northwest Territories, Nunavut, Labrador, and Newfoundland), Greenland, and numerous states in the lower 48. You’ll find it naturally occurring in Arizona, California, Colorado, Idaho, Maine, Montana, Nevada, New Hampshire, New Mexico, Oregon, Utah, Washington, and Wyoming.

This extensive native range tells us something important: this plant is incredibly adaptable and truly belongs in North American landscapes.

Why Grow American Alpine Speedwell?

Here’s where this little plant really shines. If you’re dealing with challenging growing conditions – think cold winters, short growing seasons, or rocky soils – American alpine speedwell could be exactly what your garden needs.

Perfect for Specialized Gardens

  • Rock gardens where other plants struggle
  • Alpine and mountain-style landscapes
  • Native plant gardens celebrating local flora
  • Naturalized areas that need low-maintenance groundcover

Aesthetic Appeal

Don’t let its modest size fool you. American alpine speedwell produces small but charming blue to purple flowers that add subtle color to the landscape. Its low-growing habit makes it perfect for tucking into rock crevices or carpeting difficult areas.

Pollinator and Wildlife Benefits

While small, the flowers do attract tiny pollinators, contributing to the ecosystem in their own quiet way. As a native plant, it also supports the complex web of native insects and wildlife that have evolved alongside it.

Growing Conditions and Care

The beauty of American alpine speedwell lies in its adaptability, but it does have preferences rooted in its alpine heritage.

Ideal Growing Conditions

  • Cool, moist but well-draining soils
  • Full sun to partial shade
  • Rocky or gravelly soil conditions
  • USDA Hardiness Zones 2-7 (extremely cold hardy!)

Planting and Care Tips

Once established, American alpine speedwell is refreshingly low-maintenance. Here’s how to give it the best start:

  • Plant in spring or early fall
  • Ensure excellent drainage – soggy conditions are its enemy
  • Water regularly the first year, then let natural rainfall take over
  • No fertilizer needed – it’s adapted to lean soils
  • Minimal pruning required

Is This Plant Right for Your Garden?

American alpine speedwell isn’t for every garden or every gardener. It’s not a flashy showstopper, and it won’t provide dramatic focal points or bold color displays. But if you’re working with challenging conditions, want to support native ecosystems, or are creating a rock or alpine garden, it could be perfect.

Consider this plant if you:

  • Live in zones 2-7 with cold winters
  • Have rocky, well-draining soil
  • Want low-maintenance native groundcover
  • Are creating specialized garden environments
  • Appreciate subtle, naturalistic beauty

Skip it if you’re looking for:

  • Bold, dramatic garden statements
  • Plants for humid, warm climates
  • High-maintenance, fussy specimens
  • Large-scale groundcover for big areas

The Bottom Line

American alpine speedwell represents the quiet heroes of the native plant world – modest, reliable, and perfectly adapted to their environment. While it may not win any beauty contests, it offers something perhaps more valuable: a connection to our native landscapes and a plant that simply works where others might fail.

If you’re ready to embrace the understated charm of native alpine plants, American alpine speedwell might just find a happy home in your garden’s rockiest, most challenging spots.

American Alpine Speedwell

Classification

Group

Dicot

Kingdom

Plantae - Plants

Subkingdom

Tracheobionta - Vascular plants

Superdivision

Spermatophyta - Seed plants

Division

Magnoliophyta - Flowering plants

Subdivision
Class

Magnoliopsida - Dicotyledons

Subclass

Asteridae

Order

Scrophulariales

Family

Scrophulariaceae Juss. - Figwort family

Genus

Veronica L. - speedwell

Species

Veronica wormskjoldii Roem. & Schult. - American alpine speedwell

Plant data source: USDA, NRCS 2025. The PLANTS Database. https://plants.usda.gov,. 2/25/2025. National Plant Data Team, Greensboro, NC USA