Tropical sage, a popular Southern plant |
SIMPLY LIVING
February 25, 2013
I’m waiting for hummingbirds to discover my tropical sage
plants.
Last fall, my daughter removed a large patch of the pretty, scarlet-colored
flowers from one of her garden beds but before tossing the lot into her compost
pile, she put a couple aside for me. I accepted
her gift gratefully and placed the small starts in my kitchen garden where I
hoped their bright red blooms would attract butterflies, bees and especially
hummingbirds. Since I spend considerable
time in the kitchen preparing food and cleaning up afterwards, I like to reward
myself with pretty views to gaze out upon from the kitchen window.
In the months since, the flower stalks have grown tall and
the plants have sprawled broadly. Unlike
Amber’s yard where garden space is limited, I have plenty of room for plants to
expand – if they’re the right plants. Rather
than installing more exotics that look lovely but turn out to be incredibly
hard to control or eradicate, I’m on the lookout for Florida-friendly additions
that provide beauty and attract wildlife without the need for much attention. Tropical sage fits the bill. I haven’t noticed any hummers yet but I’m
sure their arrival is just a matter of time.
Although its botanic name is Salvia coccinea, tropical sage is
a popular southern plant with many monikers.
Common names include Texas sage, scarlet sage, blood sage, hummingbird
sage and red salvia. Salvias are the
largest genus of the mint family and tropical sage (like all mints) has square
stems, aromatic leaves and small flowers displayed in a whorl around upright stems. The tubular red flowers, which attract so
much attention from nectar-seeking wildlife, are about an inch long and perfectly
shaped to accommodate a hummingbird’s long, pointy bill.
I’ve planted my tropical sage in a flowerbed where I’m also
growing a purple sage, orange cosmos and a few red, pink and white pentas. Over time, I’ve enhanced the soil in that garden
with compost, peat and lavish amounts of grass clipping mulch. While tropical sage abides such soil
amendments, it can also prosper in less enhanced settings. As long as it gets a few hours of shade every
day, it will grow in dry, sandy spots as well as rich loam.
The blooms, which continue year round except during freezes,
are more profuse if the plants receive at least some irrigation. However, even when ignored completely, tropical
sage will survive. It just won’t thrive
like it will when given a little attention.
From a lazy gardener’s point of view (mine!), one of
tropical sage’s many assets is its ability to self-seed. With her limited garden space, my daughter doesn’t
find this characteristic as endearing as I do.
In her yard, salvia coccinea volunteers kept popping up and taking over
spots where she would have preferred to grow vegetables and other herbs. Although Amber appreciated seeing all the
fluttering wildlife the plants attracted, the self-seeding Florida wildflowers simply
took up too much valuable real estate.
Unlike Amber, I’m ready for Florida-friendly,
wildlife-attracting, low-maintenance plants like tropical sage to overtake garden
space. I wouldn’t mind in the least if the
two plants my daughter gave me blazed a scarlet path beyond the garden and into
other planting beds. I wouldn’t even object
if they continued spreading their way around the lake.
One of these days, a hummingbird will discover the tubular red
blooms in my kitchen garden. When it
does, the tiny bird will be happy to have found a new source of life-sustaining
nectar. I’ll be happy too because we’ll
both be nourished - one by nectar, the other by fluttering moments of beauty.