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ITGN Oct 2021 Salvia discolor vertical

Salvia, Invaluable Autumn Garden Companions

October 21, 2021


Take time to appreciate the diversity of tender perennial salvias in play throughout the gardens on a lovely autumn day. Varied topography and climate have forced salvias to evolve into a diverse group of plants. The result is a “well-traveled” genus that is native to most continents, except for Antarctica and Australia. A tour of some Wave Hill favorites provides just a glimpse at this group’s multiformity and its value in garden design.

ITGN Oct 2021 Salvia sagittata
The gentian-blue flower, large arrow-shaped leaves and height of Salvia × 'Big Swing' (Salvia macrophylla × Salvia sagittata) in the Flower Garden make it the favorite salvia for Jess Brey and many other Wave Hill staff.

FLOWER GARDEN
Salvia splendens ‘Van Houttei’

Wave Hill’s Flower Garden would be incomplete without salvias. This year, find over 50 species and cultivars blooming alongside other autumn-flowering perennials. Gardener Gelene Scarborough includes many salvias in her plantings in this part of the garden. As she explains, “they extend the bloom season and are the best for attracting hummingbirds to the garden.” From May until the first frost, there is always a salvia in bloom in this garden space. Throughout the summer, hummingbirds keep an eye on red-hued salvias, like Salvia splendens ‘Van Houttei’ (scarlet sage cultivar).

ITGN Oct 2021 Salvia splendens
Salvia splendens ‘Van Houttei’ (scarlet sage cultivar) in the Flower Garden is a hummingbird magnet.

PERGOLA
Salvia oxyphora

With such a divergent group of plants, there is a salvia for every garden need. Beneath the Pergola, large-leaved Salvia oxyphora flourishes in partial shade alongside tropical understory plants. Gardener Shane Pritchett included Salvia oxyphora (Bolivian hummingbird sage). Its “nice foliage,” he says, ”goes well with my seasonal tropical displays. Its late blooms are great for early fall interest.”

ITGN Oct 2021 Salvia oxyphora
Salvia oxyphora (Bolivian hummingbird sage) at the Pergola goes well with the seasonal tropical displays.

DRY GARDEN
Salvia discolor

There is a salvia flower in every color, from black to gentian. Even their leaves are colorful, with red hairs, silvery undersides or embossed white veins. The award of most uniquely dressed surely goes to Salvia discolor (Andean sage). ’Discolor’—two-colored—refers to its green and white leaves, which contrast with the plant’s flowers, described by Gardener Harnek Singh as a “very unusual black.”

ITGN Oct 2021 Salvia discolor
Salvia discolor (Andean sage) weaves through flowering grasses in the Dry Garden.

WILD GARDEN
Salvia caccaliifolia

The Wild Garden is currently dominated by members of Asteraceae (aster family). Their large size commands attention, but look closer and you can catch sight of salvias peeking out between the leaves of their burly neighbors. Salvia caccaliifolia (blue vine sage) climbs up nearby plants, offering lovely gentian-blue flowers. Gardener Christopher Bivens enjoys saying the plant’s name almost as much as he likes seeing its “unique deltoid foliage with color shifts from acid greens to deep violets, all offset by deeply blue inflorescences.”

ITGN Oct 2021 Salvia caccaliifolia
Salvia caccaliifolia (blue vine sage) peeks through asters in the Wild Garden.

This post is only a glimpse into salvia’s diverse qualities—enough, I hope, to whet your appetite for discovering more on your next visit to Wave Hill this month.

Jess Brey,
Ruth Rea Howell Senior Horticultural Interpreter