Short spikes of indigo-blue, pea-like flowers cover dense, blue green foliage. This showy, long-lived, bushy perennial is excellent for massing or at the back of the border. Attractive seed pods in early summer follow the flowers. Great cut flower.
Bloom Time
Late spring to early summer
Deciduous/Evergreen
Herbaceous
Special Features
Attracts Butterflies, Waterwise, North American Native, Attracts Pollinators
Problems/Solutions
Deer Resistant
Growth Rate
Moderate
Flower Attributes
Flowers for Cutting, Showy Flowers
Landscape Use
Border
Design Ideas
A big bushy plant to flesh out sparse border with rich blue flowers. Combines well with most American native species and blends well with grasses for meadow gardens. Grow as a cut flower. Particularly good massed for a large sea of delicious cool blue.
Follow a regular watering schedule during the first growing season to establish a deep, extensive root system. Feed with a general purpose fertilizer before new growth begins in spring. Prune old flower heads to encourage more blossoms.
History
Blue false indigo is a native wildflower found through much of the eastern United States but most commonly in the South. It is classified into the Pea Family and like other legumes it is capable of fixing atmospheric nitrogen into its root system.
Lore
Native Americans used this as a dye plant for blue coloring even though it was vastly inferior to the indigo of the tropics and trade.
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Details
Description
Short spikes of indigo-blue, pea-like flowers cover dense, blue green foliage. This showy, long-lived, bushy perennial is excellent for massing or at the back of the border. Attractive seed pods in early summer follow the flowers. Great cut flower.
Bloom Time
Late spring to early summer
Deciduous/Evergreen
Herbaceous
Special Features
Attracts Butterflies, Waterwise, North American Native, Attracts Pollinators
Problems/Solutions
Deer Resistant
Growth Rate
Moderate
Flower Attributes
Flowers for Cutting, Showy Flowers
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Style
Landscape Use
Border
Design Ideas
A big bushy plant to flesh out sparse border with rich blue flowers. Combines well with most American native species and blends well with grasses for meadow gardens. Grow as a cut flower. Particularly good massed for a large sea of delicious cool blue.
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Care
Care Instructions
Follow a regular watering schedule during the first growing season to establish a deep, extensive root system. Feed with a general purpose fertilizer before new growth begins in spring. Prune old flower heads to encourage more blossoms.
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History
History
Blue false indigo is a native wildflower found through much of the eastern United States but most commonly in the South. It is classified into the Pea Family and like other legumes it is capable of fixing atmospheric nitrogen into its root system.
Lore
Native Americans used this as a dye plant for blue coloring even though it was vastly inferior to the indigo of the tropics and trade.
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About Us
We have been pioneers and craftsmen in the art of growing plants for 100 years. Since our founding in Southern California by Harry E. Rosedale, Sr. in 1926, we have been absolutely dedicated and obsessed with quality.
We have been pioneers and craftsmen in the art of growing plants for nearly 100 years. Since our founding in Southern California by Harry E. Rosedale, Sr. in 1926, we have been absolutely dedicated and obsessed with quality.