Salvia, Sage

Great for bringing hummingbirds to your garden.

More Varieties for Salvia

Salvia Overview

Genus Name Salvia
Common Name Salvia
Plant Type Annual, Herb
Light Part Sun, Sun
Height 1 to 3 feet
Width 1 to 3 foot
Flower Color Blue, Pink, Red, White
Foliage Color Blue/Green, Gray/Silver
Season Features Fall Bloom, Summer Bloom
Special Features Attracts Birds, Cut Flowers, Fragrance, Good for Containers, Low Maintenance
Zones 10, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9
Propagation Seed
Problem Solvers Drought Tolerant

Black and Blue sage

black and blue sage guaranitica
Peter Krumhardt

Salvia guaranitica 'Black and Blue' is a blue-flowering favorite of hummingbirds. Perennial in Zone 7 and warmer; it's grown as an annual in cooler zones.

Blue salvia

blue salvia farinacea
Bryan E. McCay

Salvia farinacea offers stately pale blue blooms on a 3-foot-tall plant of gray-green foliage. It's a perennial in Zones 7-10, but is usually grown as an annual.

Coral Nymph sage

coral nymph sage salvia coccinea
Lynn Karlin

Salvia coccinea 'Coral Nymph' offers bicolor, salmon-and-white tubular flowers on 2-foot stems. Perennial in Zones 8 and warmer; grown as an annual in cooler climates.

Golden Delicious pineapple sage

golden delicious pineapple sage salvia elegans
Marty Baldwin

Salvia elegans 'Golden Delicious' shows off bright golden-yellow foliage that smells of pineapples when rubbed. In autumn it bears spikes of bold red flowers. It can be grown as a perennial in Zones 8-11

Lady in Red sage

lady in red sage salvia coccinea
Peter Krumhardt

Salvia coccinea 'Lady in Red' is an award-winning, long-blooming, heat- and drought-resistant selection with bright red flowers. It grows 2 feet tall. While it's usually grown as an annual, it is perennial in Zones 7-10.

Phoenix Bright Lilac salvia

phoenix bright lilac salvia splendens
Peter Krumhardt

Salvia splendens 'Phoenix Bright Lilac' offers lilac-purple flowers all summer on compact, 16-inch-tall plants.

Pineapple sage

pineapple sage salvia elegans
Denny Schrock

Salvia elegans is a tender shrub that has pineapple-scented foliage and bright red flowers in late summer and autumn. The leaves are great for teas or garnishes. It grows 6 feet tall and 4 feet wide. Zones 8-11, though in most areas it's treated as an annual.

Scarlet Sage

scarlet sage salvia coccinea

Salvia coccinea is a durable non-stop bloomer popular in park plantings. It's usually grown as an annual, but is perennial in Zones 7-10.

Wendy's Wish salvia

wendy's wish salvia
Justin Hancock

Salvia 'Wendy's Wish' is a majestic plant with spikes of magenta-pink flowers from spring to fall. It grows 3 feet tall and wide. Usually grown as an annual, it is a perennial in Zones 9-11.

Salvia Companion Plants

Annual Vinca

pink annual vinca flowers
Peter Krumhardt

You've gotta love annual vinca—it really delivers. It will tolerate a wide variety of conditions and still keep it up with almost unreal-looking, glossy green flowers and pretty pink, lavender, or red flowers that look like tiny parasols. Whether the summer is dry or wet, hot or cold, vinca plugs along unfazed. It makes a great container plant. Or plant it in a bed or border, grouping at least eight or more together for best effect. Plant established seedlings in spring after all danger of frost has passed. Vinca withstands drought but does best with moderate moisture. Fertilize occasionally. Like impatiens, this plant tends to be "self-cleaning" and needs little deadheading.

Sweet Potato Vine

sweet potato vines
Peter Krumhardt

Among the most popular container-garden plants, sweet potato vine is a vigorous grower that you can count on to make a big impact. Its colorful foliage, in shades of chartreuse or purple, accents just about any other plant. Grow a few together in a large pot, and they make a big impact all on their own. Sweet potato vines do best during the warm days of summer and prefer moist, well-drained soil. They thrive in sun or shade.

Ageratum

ageratum blooms in purple container
Tom McWilliam

Ageratum is such a little workhorse that nearly every garden should have some. This annual is an easy-to-grow, old-fashioned favorite that produces a steady show of colorful powder-pufflike flowers from late spring through frost. It's also rarely bothered by pests, so you count on it to look good. Plus, it provides some of the truest blues you can find in flowers—a rare thing. Plant in spring after all danger of frost has passed. Plant in groups of a dozen or more for best show. Deadhead and fertilize regularly for best blooms.

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