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(Attachment Link) Salvia semiatrata blooming in our Sacramento, California garden. It blooms all winter - great for the hummingbirds! I appreciate the pebbled texture of the foliage of this species.My wife and I have some other winter blooming species planned for the garden - mostly for the hummingbirds!
meanie,What misfortune! Hopefully your Salvias will recover.
By the way, did you have any success growing it (S. chiapensis) from seed? Our plants do set viable seed and I have grown a few on. I have to admit that I do not get much seed from the plants - they are all the same clone. Many Salvias set copious amounts of seed when selfed - clearly not S. chiapensis. Not in our garden anyway.
We are planning to add Salvia gesneriiflora to the garden - mostly for the winter bloom and food for the Anna's Hummingbirds. We have had good luck cutting back S. semiatrata every season. We still have a fabulous blooming season and can keep it in bounds. Hopefully the same protocol will work with S. gesneriiflora. It can get huge, at least around here.
I may regret it, but we plan to try S. madrensis too. The winter bloom is perfect, but it is such a large beast.One more item on the Salvia front around here - I was gifted seed of the yellow, yellow-orange and lavender forms of Salvia spathacea (God bless you Ginny Hunt!). Germination was fantastic and we should see flowers next spring. For us, a prefect xeric species for the shade.
S.gesneriiflora does not grow overly large in a pot here................
I have just collected few seeds so if you want to try sowing...
meanie,This and many of your other comments and observations I find very useful.I grow Salvia sinaloensis in a pot. It is survives the winter outdoors in the ground at our Sacramento home, however it has been difficult for us to have consistent flower production every years. Maybe too much root competition from neighboring trees and shrubs. In a pot it blooms well every year.Your success with container culture has prompted me to consider some other "tender" species in pots. There are a number that I have grown in the past that I would not mind having again as container plants, S. melissodora and S. blepharophylla to name a few.
Many of the tender and borderline hardy Salvia adapt very well to pot culture. They will be smaller and ultimately produce a lower number of blooms but on the whole few disappoint in a pot. Also, if the climate is not suited then we have no choice. I also find that lifting them in early to mid October and chucking them into a pot for winter causes most species and cultivars no great distress.