Good old gardening hunches. There I was several months ago with a gap to fill in the garden, standing in a garden centre looking at a bunch of herbs and other potted lovelies for sale. Which one to choose? That's where the hunch came in handy.
The spot to be filled was small yet sunny, and it wasn't that far from the place where a culinary sage bush had thrived gorgeously for several years. And there I was staring at a potted seedling of purple sage in the garden centre. Thank goodness I followed my hunch because the purple sage is also thriving now, and this week it has burst into full colour with its combination of blue blooms and purpley-green foliage. A very nice show indeed.
Here it is in close up... |
… and standing a few feet further back. So far it is staying as a smallish thing, no more than two feet high and wide at the most. Hopefully it won't get any bigger. |
The leaves of the common, culinary sage, (Salvia officinalis) are longer, narrower and decidedly greener than the purple plant's foliage. They also seem a bit more fragrant. |
As far as growing tips go, it needs sunshine, soil that drains well and that's about it. Haven't fed it, clipped it, or bothered too much with watering it. It has just looked after itself, but maybe that's just my good luck that sage likes it here.
You do grow excellent sage, and other herbs - in fact everything you grow looks great!! The purple sage, leaves & blooms, look wonderful. I was wondering, is the purple sage edible too? Blooms also? Just saw a pic of Mrs Lithops, lol - she was such a star! :D
ReplyDeletePadaek
ReplyDeleteI had a little laugh when I looked up Jill Norman's book of herbs and spices, and for purple sage she says: "It rarely flowers but when it does the blue flowers look stunning against the foliage"
Purple sage is usable in all the ways that you can use common sage, but is has the slight advantage that it isn't as pungent as common sage. I find common sage an somewhat overpowering herb, so the trick with it is to not use too much. Though I haven't yet cooked with purple sage, I look forward to doing so, especially if it has a slightly milder flavour than its cousin.
And Mrs Lithops, you're right. She was a star!