Sinaloa Blue Sage
Salvia
Sage
Thought in ancient times to perpetuate good health, an Arab proverb asks, “How shall a man die with sage in his garden?” Our Salvias are diverse perennials, shrubs or subshrubs, many hailing from the Mediterranean, Mexico, South America and some of our western states. Reliable once established, and generally undaunted by pests, disease and drought, they combine an array of flowers and often aromatic foliage in many different sizes, shapes and hues.
Indigenous to the Mexican province Sinaloa, this compact bushy Salvia displays tantalizing color. Low growing stems initially trail on the ground, concealed by dark green, textured leaves infused with plum-purple hues, and bronze-tinted new growth. Well above the narrow foliage, deep blue, airy, upright spikes feature spaced whorls of sable calyxes and vivid flowers marked with two subtle white lines on each lower lip.
A charmer for the border’s edge, a stone wall or the rock garden, Salvia sinaloensis spreads by underground rhizomes, disappears in the winter, and appreciates well drained soil.
Blooms June–October.
Size: 6" – 10" high x 15" – 18" wide.
Hardy to zone 8.
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Other selections in this genus:
- Salvia x ‘Allen Chickering’
- Salvia argentea
- Salvia arizonica
- Salvia azurea ‘Nekan’
- Salvia ‘Bee’s Bliss’
- Salvia x ‘Big Swing’
- Salvia brandegeei ‘Pacific Blue’
- Salvia cacaliifolia
- Salvia chiapensis
- Salvia clevelandii ‘Whirly Blue’
- Salvia clevelandii ‘Winnifred Gilman’
- Salvia confertiflora
- Salvia corrugata
- Salvia ‘El Cielo Blue’
- Salvia ‘Eveline’
- Salvia forsskaolii
- Salvia glechomifolia
- Salvia greggii ‘Lowry’s Peach’
- Salvia x ‘Nuevo Leon’
- Salvia greggii ‘Wild Thing’
- Salvia guaranitica ‘Black and Blue’
- Salvia guaranitica ‘Blue Ensign’
- Salvia holwayi
- Salvia involucrata ‘Hidalgo’
- Salvia involucrata ‘Mulberry Jam’
- Salvia x jamensis ‘Pat Vlasto’
- Salvia leucantha x elegans ‘Anthony Parker’
- Salvia ‘Madeline’
- Salvia melissodora (Yucca Do Form)
- Salvia mexicana ‘Compton’s Form’
- Salvia mexicana ‘Limelight’
- Salvia mexicana ‘Tula’
- Salvia microphylla
- Salvia microphylla ‘Dennis’ Pink’
- Salvia microphylla x greggii ‘Red Velvet’
- Salvia microphylla ‘Hoja Grande’
- Salvia microphylla ‘San Carlos Festival’
- Salvia microphylla ‘Wild Watermelon’
- Salvia moorcroftiana ssp. x indica
- Salvia nemorosa ‘Amethyst’
- Salvia nemorosa ‘Blue Marvel’
- Salvia nemorosa ‘Caradonna’
- Salvia nemorosa ‘Negrito’
- Salvia nemorosa ‘Rosenwein’
- Salvia nemorosa ‘Sensation Deep Rose’
- Salvia nemorosa ‘Wesuwe’
- Salvia nemorosa ‘Schwellenburg’
- Salvia nubicola
- Salvia nutans
- Salvia ‘Phyllis Fancy’
- Salvia ‘Pozo Blue’
- Salvia pratensis ‘Sky Dance’
- Salvia pratensis ‘Swan Lake’
- Salvia pratensis ‘Sweet Esmeralda’
- Salvia pratensis ‘Twilight Serenade’
- Salvia przewalskii
- Salvia ‘Purple Majesty’
- Salvia purpurea ‘Lavender Lace’
- Salvia reptans
- Salvia reptans ‘West Texas Form’
- Salvia sclarea ‘Vatican White’
- Salvia semiatrata
- Salvia ‘Silke’s Dream’
- Salvia x sylvestris ‘Dear Anja’
- Salvia x sylvestris ‘Tanzerin’
- Salvia uliginosa
- Salvia ‘Ultra Violet’
- Salvia urica
- Salvia vanhoutii (Burgundy Form)
- Salvia verticillata ‘Purple Rain’
- Salvia ‘Waverly’