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Salvia chamaedryoides “Blue Mexican Sage”

Salvia chamaedryoides “Blue Mexican Sage”

$7.88

Quantity discounts
1 2-4 5-10 11-20 21-50 51-100 101-250 251-500 501-1000 1001+
$7.88 $7.80 $7.76 $7.68 $7.60 $7.33 $6.93 $6.61 $6.30 $5.98

In stock (can be backordered)

Description

Salvia chamaedryoides (Germander Sage) – This wonderful mostly evergreen subshrub has a small dense mounding and spreading habit and grows 12 to 18 inches tall to 3 to 4 feet wide and spreading slowly outward from shoots from a spreading rootstock – it tends to mound towards the middle with branches spreading out along the ground. It has small narrow half inch long grey-green leaves and dark blue flowers that appear almost year-round, except in the coolest of seasons when the plant drops some leaves, becoming somewhat semi-deciduous. Peak blooming period is mid-spring through late Autumn. This Salvia does best in full sun to very light shade in well-draining soil where it requires little watering once it’s established. Hardy to 5-10°F and can be grown down into USDA zone 8 and possibly 7 where it can regrow after freezing to the ground. In hot inland locations does better with some shade and occasional irrigation. A great plant with sparkling blue flowers for use as a small-scale ground cover for the dry or occasionally irrigated garden and good at the front of the border. Good plant for attracting hummingbirds. Germander Sage is native to the high Chihuahuan desert from 7,000 to 9,000 feet in the Sierra Madre Oriental mountain range in Mexico. The name Salvia comes from the name used by Pliny for a plant in the genus and comes from the Latin word ‘salvere’ meaning “to save” in reference to the long-believed healing properties of several Sage species and its specific name comes from being like germander, Teucrium chamaedrys, which gets from the Greek words ‘khamai’ meaning “ground” and ‘drus’ meaning “oak” and this is thought to mean dwarf-like in stature, thought others note that the similarity is because both plants having a spreading rootstock. Other common names include Mexican Blue Sage and Blue Oak Sage. Long lived plants in areas that only receive one (or less) irrigation application in the summer months – this is a GREAT drought tolerant plant. People that have problems with it are generally over watering it or planting it in too heavy a soil.

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