Salvia farinacea 'Augusta Duelberg'

Augusta Duelberg Mealy Cup Sage

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Item #: 6823

Zones: 7b to 9b, at least

Dormancy: Winter

Height: 30" tall

Culture: Sun

Origin: United States

Pot Size: 3.5" pot (24 fl. oz/0.7 L)


Leave it to Texas plantsman Greg Grant to have nothing better to do on a summer day than wander through old graveyards, where he stumbled on a clump of Salvia farinacea gracing the Texas gravesite of Augusta Duelberg. The cuttings rooted and Salvia 'Augusta Duelberg' was born. This splendid selection of the Texas native Salvia farinacea makes a compact 30" tall x 4' wide specimen, topped from May until frost with hundreds of spikes of silvery-white flowers...attractive to hummingbirds. Obviously heat- and drought-tolerant, this native wildflower has been a real standout in our trials.

Maintenance:

Salvia farinacea is a very low maintenance plant. Most often, all it needs is to be cut to the ground at some point between a hard frost in fall and before new growth starts in spring. It can be cut to the ground in late summer if it has become shabby. It will soon be back in growth and blooming up to frost. Most years it does not need this treatment.

Salvia farinacea is a clump former and not a runner so it does not need to be reined in. It can produce some seedlings which in some gardens would be a sign of success but if one is attempting to maintain a particular clone, then it might be best to eliminate the seedlings because they might not be true to type.

Growing Conditions:

Full sun all day produces the most bloom, sturdy self supporting stems and clean foliage. Powdery mildew is rarely a problem when grown in sun but can be a problem when grown in part sun. Salvia farinacea is adaptable to a range of soil types except for soggy. It is quite drought tolerant.

Natural Impact:

Vertical spikes of blue (or white) are a valuable contrast to the shapes and colors of so many other flowering plants and they are produced all summer into fall. The flowers are highly visited by many species of bees and other pollinators and for that reason alone should be included in any sunny garden. All day long the flower spikes are animated by visiting bumblebees, bobbing back and forth. They are also a good cut-flower. And salvias are not usually eaten by deer or rabbits.