Agastache - Late Summer's Dusty Colors = You Can Grow That!
Scented leaves, gorgeous late-summer
flowers and durable plants beloved by butterflies, bees and hummingbirds, make
Agasataches a garden favorite. Most Agastaches are cold hardy to zone 6 so they
will live at least a few years in our climate.
Coronado Hyssop is a Mexican native. I took this photo at the Colorado Springs Utilities Xeriscape Demonstration Garden https://www.csu.org/wa/xeri/xeriscape.jsp
Common names for Agastache include:
Hummingbird Mint, Anise Hyssop, Giant Hyssop, Sunset Hyssop, Lavender Mint, and
Korean Mint.
Agastache aurnatiaca Coronado hyssop from Plant Select |
Agastaches, including A. rupestris,
A. Foeniculum, and A. Aurantiaca, etc., can take the heat as well as an early
frost and keep on going. They are drought tolerant so good drainage is
important to their survival. They also love sun, even in our humid, zone 7,
summertime climate.
Only one or two stems come up on
each plant so a typical butterfly flower bed could hold several plants without
crowding. The flower heads can be used in cut flower bouquets if they are harvested
while they are no more than two-thirds open.
The scented leaves are 2 or 3 inches
long and 1 or 2 inches wide and are hairy on the underside.
Agastache cana Sinning Sonoran Sunset from Sooner Plant Farm
Hyssop officinalis, the herb hyssop,
Agastache foeniculum or giant blue hyssop, is in the same, mint, plant family
but they are distant relations to the garden varieties.
Anise Hyssop, Agastache foeniculum
is the native perennial plant that grows up to 3-feet tall with branching stems
and 4-inch long leaves.
Anise Hyssop leaves smell like
licorice and are used for flavoring candy, making tea, and medicinally for
treating cold symptoms. More historic medicinal uses are at http://www.alchemy-works.com/agastache_foeniculum.html
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Agastache aurantiaca Coronado Hyssop from White Flower Farm |
Agastache x Blue Fortune Anise Hyssop from Proven Winners
Like all plants with scented, fuzzy,
leaves, rabbits and deer leave them alone. The USDA says Agastache Clayton ex
Gronov, giant hyssop, is native across the entire continent (http://plants.usda.gov/core/profile?symbol=AGAST)
Agasatache or Hyssop is easy to grow
from seed. Seeds that fall on the ground in late-summer will remain dormant
until spring. Seeds can be collected now to plant indoors during the winter to
provide seedlings to set out in the spring.
The flowers of all varieties feed
bees, syrphid flies, skippers, butterflies and moths.
Agastache or Hyssop varieties
include: Alabaster to 3-feet tall with white flowers, Honey Bee Blue a good
selection for flower gardens, Honey Bee White an improved Alabaster white, and
Licorice Blue and Licorice White that will grow 3 or 4-feet tall and are good
in a cutting garden.
There is also one creeping variety,
Agastache Mexicana that produces many stems and spreads from its root. Rose
flowers on 1-foot tall spikes. Cold hardy only to zone 8.
Last spring, I planted a dozen
seedlings along the west side of the vegetable garden fence expecting a
continuation of the drought and record heat. With this summer’s return to normal
rainfall a few of the seedlings drowned.
Agastache has very few problems
though there will be a few insect holes and maybe a bit of mildew or rust if
the weather is especially wet or they are planted near an overhead sprinkler.
To grow in containers be sure the drainage
is good and there is plenty of air circulation.
Cold hardiness of the different varieties ranges from zones
5 or 6 to zone 10, depending on the one selected.
Sooner
Plant Farm (www.soonerplantfarm.com) in Tahlequah offers 20 of the new hybrids, including:
Sonoran Sunset, Heatwave, Coronado Red, Mexicana Red Fortune, Kudos Mandarin
and Sangria.
Agastache x Blue Fortune Anise
Hyssop is a Proven
Winners selection that many nurseries carry.
Oklahoma's native Agastache is Agastache nepetoides or yellow giant hyssop.
Mountain Mint, TX Hummingbird Mint
or Mosquito Hyssop, Agastache cana Bolero, is cold hardy to zone 5. It has
rose-pink flowers on 3-foot tall stems.
Seed sources: Jelitto (Germany)
15-Agastache varieties http://jelitto.com;
Swallowtail Gardens www.swallowtailgardenseeds.com, 11-varieties; and, Plant
World Seeds www.plant-world-seeds.com
has 11 unusual varieties including Green Candles.
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