Common Name: Type: Family: Native Range: Zone: Height: Spread: Bloom Bloom Description: Sun: Water: Maintenance: Suggested Use: Flower: Attracts: Tolerate: |
salvia Herbaceous perennial Lamiaceae Texas, Mexico 8 to 10 1.00 to 3.00 feet 1.00 to 2.00 feet May to frost Violet blue Full sun to part shade Medium Low Annual Showy Attracts: Butterflies Deer, Clay Soil, Dry Soil |
Tender perennial that is winter hardy to USDA Zones 8-10. North of zone 7 grow as a warm weather annual in average, evenly moist, well-drained soils in full sun to part shade. Tolerates poor soils and some drought. Plants grown from seed sown directly in the ground after last frost date may not bloom. Seed should be started indoors 10-12 weeks before last frost date. Set out seedlings or purchased plants after last frost date. If desired, cut back and pot up several plants in fall or take cuttings in late summer for overwintering in a bright but cool sunny window. Native to Texas and Mexico, mealycup sage is a shrubby, clump-forming, tender perennial that typically grows 1.5-3’ tall on erect, branching, square stems. It features two-lipped, violet-blue flowers in 4-8” axillary and terminal racemes from summer to fall. Drooping, irregularly-serrate, ovate-lanceolate, gray-green leaves (to 3” long). Common name and specific epithet are in reference to the white powdery felting found on the upper stems and calyx (“mealy” means covered with powdery meal, “cup” is in reference to the calyx shape and farinacea comes from the Latin word for flour or meal). Cultivars are available in various shades of blue, purple, lavender, white and bicolor. |
Information on this page is from Missouri Botanical Gardens. or Dave’s Garden |
This page last updated or reviewed 210701