Late Blooming Summer Perennials

Darin Engh from Engh Gardens has some top picks for late-blooming perennials which can take center stage and keep color in your yard.

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Russian Sage Perovskia atriplicifolia– deer resistant, drought tolerant, prefers average to sandy or gravelly well-drained soil, tends to lean towards the sun, light staking may be needed, usually pest-free

• Plants should be cut back several inches from the ground in early spring to encourage dense growth and flowering

• Loose, hairy flowers, and its fine foliage give this shrublike plant a smokey blue appearance that contrasts well with large, yellow or daisy-like flowers

• Mint family remember releases a sagelike pungence when crushed

• Excellent for silvery effect combined with grasses and other large-scale perennials in New American-style gardens and other naturalistic sites

Black-eyed Susan Rudbeckia maxima– deer resistant, native plant, habitat for small wildlife, long lasting cut flower

• Remove dead flowers to encourage a second blooming later in summer.

• Savor summer’s splendor – impose the hazy texture of another wonderful veil through which to view pleasing vignette

Torch lily Kniphofia – Old fashioned redhot pokers, named for their glowing red tips and smoldering yellow shafts, have been upstaged by a rainbow of torch lily hybrids that has set the garden afire.

• Although the main bloom period for torch lilies is late spring and early summer, most varieties bloom again if the spent flower stalks are regularly removed from the clump

• Avoid excessive watering to prevent crown rot

Phlox Phlox paniculata – today’s garden phlox or summer phlox

• hybridizers have developed spectacular flower heads in vivid colors

• blooming usually for a month in July, August, or September, garden phlox often reblooms if immediately cut back

• honey-scented flowers

• divide every 4 years in spring or fall

Stonecrop Sedum – drought tolerant, prefers average to sandy well-drained soil, usually pest free

• on warm days they are covered with butterflies and bees

• leave the dead flowerheads at the end of the season – they help protect the crowns over winter

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For more information, visit Engh Gardens in Sandy or one of their other locations. And Saturday, August 18 will feature salsa tastings all day.

8214 South 700 East

Sandy, UT 84070

(801)748-0102
www.enghgardens.com

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