do i dare plant this?

yerba-mansa-closeup

Do any of you know how this plant would do in a gar­den set­ting? It’s thick-leaved yerba santa (Eri­o­d­ic­tyon cras­si­folium) one of our local native species in the phacelia family.

yerba-mansa-at-torrey-pines

I’ve seen it around in the wild areas of town for a while, and I’ve always liked its odd, stemmy growth habit, with a tuft of ser­rated gray-green leaves on the ends of straight, floppy or con­torted branches. Here’s how it looks in one set­ting at Tor­rey Pines State Pre­serve. You can see all the ways the branches grow, includ­ing this big cir­cu­larl loop-de-loop.

yerba-mansa-medium-range-shot

Right now yerba san­tas all around town are in full bloom, bear­ing these del­i­cate lavender-colored tubu­lar blooms at the ends of their stems. I’m in love.

In most loca­tions I’ve seen the plant grow­ing four to six feet tall, and mound­ing six to eight feet in width. What I’ve heard some of the native plant peo­ple say about how it grows in the wilds–that it spreads widely via under­ground run­ners to develop big colonies–is the part that scares me. I think I’d like the effect of its cool stems grow­ing up and through some low ground­cov­ers, but I don’t want it to be the total mon­ster, either.

It’s a plant that makes a state­ment, but I don’t want the state­ment to be that I was gullible enough to plant a totally rank plant into the garden!

March 24 2009 | Categories: gardeningplant profiles | Tags: | 7 Comments »