Salvia Species, Mealycup Sage, Mealy Sage

Salviafarinacea

Family
Lamiaceae (lay-mee-AY-see-ee)
Genus
Salvia (SAL-vee-uh)
Species
farinacea (far-ih-NAH-kee-uh)
Synonym
Salvia farinacea
Salvia earlei
Spacing
18-24 in. (45-60 cm)
Hardiness
9-12 in. (22-30 cm)
Sun Exposure
USDA Zone 7b: to -14.9 °C (5 °F)
USDA Zone 8a: to -12.2 °C (10 °F)
USDA Zone 8b: to -9.4 °C (15 °F)
USDA Zone 9a: to -6.6 °C (20 °F)
USDA Zone 9b: to -3.8 °C (25 °F)
USDA Zone 10a: to -1.1 °C (30 °F)
USDA Zone 10b: to 1.7 °C (35 °F)
USDA Zone 11: above 4.5 °C (40 °F)
Danger
Sun to Partial Shade
Bloom Color
N/A
Bloom Time
Dark Blue
Blue-Violet
White/Near White
Foliage
Mid Spring
Late Spring/Early Summer
Mid Summer
Late Summer/Early Fall
Other Details
Other details
Herbaceous
This plant is resistant to deer
Propagation Methods
Seed Collecting
From softwood cuttings
From seed; sow indoors before last frost
Soil pH requirements
Bag seedheads to capture ripening seed
Allow seedheads to dry on plants; remove and collect seeds
Properly cleaned, seed can be successfully stored
Patent Information
Foliage Color
Bloom Characteristics
Water Requirements
Perennials
Where to Grow
Regional

This plant is said to grow outdoors in the following regions:

Auburn, Alabama

Pine Level, Alabama

Phoenix, Arizona

Cabot, Arkansas

Auburn, California

JACUMBA, California

Menifee, California

Merced, California

Rancho Mirage, California

Stockton, California

Arvada, Colorado

Deland, Florida

Inverness, Florida

Jacksonville, Florida

Merritt Island, Florida

Saint Petersburg, Florida(2 reports)

Sanford, Florida

Winter Springs, Florida

Braselton, Georgia

Barbourville, Kentucky

Hebron, Kentucky

Minden, Louisiana

New Orleans, Louisiana

Zachary, Louisiana

Crofton, Maryland

Florence, Mississippi

Springfield, Missouri

Brooklyn, New York

Concord, North Carolina

Owasso, Oklahoma

Columbia, South Carolina

Moncks Corner, South Carolina

North Augusta, South Carolina

Lawrenceburg, Tennessee

Lebanon, Tennessee

Murfreesboro, Tennessee

Arlington, Texas

Austin, Texas(3 reports)

Bedford, Texas

Belton, Texas

Bulverde, Texas

Fort Worth, Texas

Irving, Texas

Kerrville, Texas

Lipan, Texas

Lubbock, Texas

Mc Kinney, Texas

San Antonio, Texas(3 reports)

Santo, Texas

Richmond, Virginia

Kinnear, Wyoming

Riverton, Wyoming

show all

Featured Videos

Gardener's Notes:

7
positives
2
neutrals
0
negative
Sort By:
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T
Bedford, TX | October 2010 | positive

This Texas Wildflower blooms early spring until the hot summer, then springs back with an abundance of blue blooms in fall. Cut it back ...Read More

T
Concord, NC (Zone 7a) | August 2010 | positive

More of a purple color close up, but bluish from far back, not as tall as other blue colored salvias, the intense sun here in NC doesn't ...Read More

E
E
San Antonio, TX | February 2010 | positive

I first came to admire this plant when I saw it in a lot that was being plowed up. Went out & dug up a wheel barrow full & planted it ar...Read More

S
S
Anne Arundel,, MD (Zone 7b) | January 2010 | neutral

This is perennial for me, gradually becoming bigger but does not seem to do well with transplanting. THe roots are woody and hard to divi...Read More

H
H
San Antonio, TX (Zone 8b) | April 2007 | positive

This plant can be found growing natively in Connecticutt,, Florida, Louisiana, New Mexico, Ohio, Oklahoma, and Texas. It does best in fu...Read More

B
| February 2006 | positive

I grow this in full sun and live in a californian type climate (no rain in summer but i use a watering system). Has any one else experie...Read More

D
Springfield, MO | July 2003 | positive

This plant readily self-sows, but usually also survives southwest Missouri winters (in my garden at least). Goldfinches relish the seeds....Read More

L
| May 2002 | neutral

6-8" upright spikes of china blue flowers above compact bushy plant. Unreliable perennial except for in well drained sites. Grown norma...Read More

T
T
Murfreesboro, TN (Zone 7a) | March 2001 | positive

Tender perennial grown as an annual in colder climates. One of the showiest salvias for full sun locations; foliage is gray-green topped ...Read More

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