Stachys monieri 'Hummelo' - Two Planted in Front - October 2023
I was walking the nursery tables at The Growing Place during their 50% off end-of-the-season sale and found a few things that I've decided to add to the garden. The first one was the Cardoon that I posted about earlier this week. I noted that I wasn't sure it was going to be hardy for our zone, but my plan is to 'mulch it in' pretty hard with biosolids and leaves and hope for the best.
The sign at TGP for something called Stachys monieri 'Hummelo' rang a bell in my brain. Here's the sign:
It talks about this being a 'good cutting flower' - which I love. It was the Perennial Plant of the Year in 2019 and has a 'long bloom time' and 'neat habit'. Sounds great, right? I pull up Roy's "appropriate plant list" and take a look. I scroll down to the {s} and see this listed: Stachys officinalis ‘Hummelo’.
Hmmm... officcinalis. While this tag reads monieri.
I dig a little deeper, and find this article from Horticulture Magazine where they say....these are the same plant. Pfew. See below for a screenshot from Hort Mag:
Walters Garden also has some relevant information in their listing - including how, while it may be unknown, it is a unique addition to any sunny spot and how it emerged from trials at the Chicago Botanic Garden. From Walters Garden:
Though this plant is relatively unknown to many gardeners, it makes a unique addition to any sunny border. Once you try it, you'll see that it goes with just about everything else in the garden. It is very easy to grow and deserves to be planted more widely in American landscapes.
'Hummelo' received the highest rating out of 22 Stachys studied in the Plant Evaluation Trials at the Chicago Botanic Garden. The trial was run from 1998-2004 by Richard G. Hawke.
That's enough for me.
They had two remaining, so I grabbed both. They need full sun, so I figured the front yard was the right move. I posted recently about the mass of Little Henry Sweetspire that are planted in the corner of our driveway and front walk and talked about how they're showing a little red. Those shrubs are in a bed all by themselves. So...I cut the bed on the sidewalk side a little bigger and decided to plant these in front of the Sweetspire shrubs. Below is that newly-expanded bed. You can see the fresh part with the darker soil in front of the shrubs:
This small bed expansion sure feels like the first step towards planting even more around these shrubs - as soon as tomorrow.
My Fall Planting List - so far - includes a number of new and divided plants.
Now up to 25 new plants. 3 new via division. 28 total for 2023 #FallPlanting.
- Five divided Everillo Sedges - Carex Everillo - from one sedge with Center rot in the backyard.
- A Sempervivum ‘Hopewell’ - a succulent-looking Chicks and Hens planted down by the sidewalk - IB2DWs.
- Two Sedum spurium 'Voodoo' - IB2DWs - to attempt to outcompete the Creeping Jenny.
- Split three Elijah Blue Fescue clumps into six - IB2DWs along the driveway.
- A single Burgundy Glow Ajuga along the driveway IB2DWs. Lots of groundcover IB2DWs, this Fall.
- Eight Ajuga 'Chocolate Chip' planted - five in the island bed. Three along south front porch bed border.
- A Cardoon - IB2DWs - that I'm not sure is going to make it. I'm going to mulch it in VERY heavily this Winter.
- Two Silver Mound Artemisias planted IB2DWs - close to the current planted bed.
- A dwarf, fern-like shrub: Matcha Ball Ash Leaf Spirea planted in the front porch bed.
- Three Pentsemon 'Midnight Masquerade' dark foliage perennials planted in the new/extended IB2DWs bed.
- Two Stachys monieri 'Hummelo' plants, in the front yard by the Sweetspire.
Here are the front and back of the plant tags for these two Stachys monieri or Stachys officinials 'Hummelo'.
Comments
Post a Comment
Be nice to each other here.