Salvia nemorosa White Profusion - Profusion Series
Salvia nemorosa 'White Profusion' PP33652 CPBRAF
Mature Height: 16 to 20 inches
Mature Spread: 16 to 20 inches
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An excellent white reblooming hybrid Salvia nemorosa. Bright white flowers highlight on the emerald green calyxes with numerous reblooms especially when deadheaded. The compact stature gives it great flexibility for a number of applications where you would otherwise be unable to use salvia. Finally to top it off, it's just an easy to grow tough plant, the kind that rewards gardeners of all skill levels and can be used in growing conditions that would stress other plants. Beauty, Hardiness, and flexibility all in one package.
Salvia is easy to grow and we like to offer plants that provide great results with minimal input. White is a great background color for bringing out the best of your colored flowers. Growing to about 16 inches tall and wide, saliva makes a great flowering perennial for the mid-point of garden beds, rock gardens, and cottage gardens. Planted in mass it can be truly stunning offering a platform of color to pollinators when it is in bloom.
Photo Credit: Walter Gardens
Bloom Color: | Crisp white flowers; Emerald green calyxes |
Bloom Period: | Late spring to early summer |
Genus & Species: | Salvia nemorosa 'White Profusion' PP33652 CPBRAF |
Mature Height: | 16 to 20 inches |
Mature Spread: | 16 to 20 inches |
Plant Spacing: | 14 to 18 inches |
Planting Depth: | At crown level (base of the plant) |
Planting Time: | Spring or early summer planting |
Soil Type: | Prefers soil with good drainage, drought tolerant |
Sun Exposure: | Full Sun |
Zone: | 3 to 8 |
General care for any tree or shrub is easy, but like any living thing will require your attention. Please educate yourself and follow these simple rules.
Salvia nemorosa White Profusion - Profusion Series
Easy to grow in almost any climate, saliva is a tough drought resistant plant. During the bloom period it does benefit from additional water and will perform better if watered regularly from spring into mid-summer. Deadheading the plants will encourage new blooms to come on. You can cut them all the way back to the newest foliage at the base of the plant if they become leggy, if cut back the plants may also rebloom, but usually the flowers won't be as voluminous as the first bloom. This is a great plant for beginning gardeners.