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Plant of week: Salvia farinacea

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message #:
  1630.1
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  4/27/2007 3:28 pm

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Salvia farinacea

 

Mealycup sage

Annual , Perennial

 

Light: sun - partial shade

Height:  1 to 3 feet

Width:  4 to 8 inches

Flower Colors: rich deep blue; silvery white; bi-colors

Bloom Time: summer - fall

Special Features:

Containers

CutFlowers

Drying

Easy to Grow

Flowers

 

 

Companion Plants Shrub roses

 

A good choice for beds, edgings, mass plantings, and containers, mealycup sage is an easy-to-grow annual known for its showy flower spikes in rich blue or silvery white that bloom from midsummer to frost. It grows 1 to 3 feet tall, depending on soil fertility, moisture, and the species.

Grow it as an annual in Zones 2 to 6. In mild-winter climates Zones 7 to 11 it can be grown as a perennial.

It's a long-lasting cut flower and is excellent for drying. Sometimes, in fact, it will dry right in the vase.

 

Notable Varieties

'Victoria Blue' is excellent -- easy to grow with gorgeous midnight-blue flowers. 'Victoria White' is elegant silvery white. 'Strata' has interesting bicolored flowers.

 

Care

Likes average, well-drained soil with moderate moisture. Fertilize by working in compost two or three times during the season or by applying a slow-release fertilizer, following label directions exactly. Trim spent flower spikes as they fade in color to promote the growth of more flowers.

 

Planting

Buy transplants not yet in flower and plant outdoors in spring after all danger of frost has passed in all zones, or plant in fall in Zones 7 to 11. Pinch the tips to induce all-important branching. To start from seed, sow uncovered, indoors, 6 to 8 weeks before last frost. Space 6 to 12 inches apart.

 

 

Pests and Diseases

Damping off, leaf spot, rust, aphid, stalk borer, and leafhopper can all occasionally cause problems.

 

 

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