Why plant Audubon® Native Shrubby St. John's Wort?
While the popular claims that St. John’s Wort extracts can cure depression are dubious at best, there is no doubt that Shrubby St. John’s Wort’s flowers in your garden will lift your spirits. The sunny yellow blooms, looking like powder puffs with their fluffy pompoms of threadlike stamens, make summer borders shine. The arrival of the blooms makes for happy bees, too, who eagerly gather the abundant pollen. Bumblebees relish the pollen, bringing it back to their nests to feed their young. A chipper little plant for mixed borders, cottage gardens, and native plantings, Shrubby St. John’s Wort is wonderful anywhere you need a dose of good cheer!
Various species of St. John’s Wort are native all over the world. As a result, this group of plants has had a long partnership with humans, and many myths have arisen regarding these plants. Ancient Greeks hung St. John’s Wort in their windows to ward off ghosts and evil demons. In Europe, one species was associated with John the Baptist, which is where St. John’s Wort got its name. Throughout the ages, the plant has been proposed as a cure for everything from bedwetting to depression to cancer. Science has not been able to substantiate those claims.
How to use Audubon® Native Shrubby St. John's Wort in the landscape?
Shrubby St. John’s Wort flowers offer no nectar—only pollen—but that doesn’t prevent one pretty, petite butterfly from having an interest in the plant. The gray hairstreak lays its eggs on the foliage. Its little, pale green or pinkish caterpillars are no cause for alarm!
Planting Zones
Hardiness Zone: 3-8
How To Plant Audubon® Native Shrubby St. John's Wort
An undemanding plant, Shrubby St. John’s Wort is easy to care for. It grows happily in moist to rather dry soil and needs little supplemental irrigation once established. Give it a position in full or part sun. You may want to give your St. John’s Wort a light trim in late winter or early spring to keep it looking tidy, though this isn’t absolutely necessary. If you do trim in spring, you will not sacrifice flowers, as this plant blooms on “new wood,” or the new growth of the season. St. John’s Wort may reseed in your landscape, but not excessively.
How To Fertilize
Incorporate Elements Starter Plant food granular form into the soil when planting. If planting in spring or summer, start fertilizing late fall using Elements Starter Plant food granular form on an annual basis each late fall. Continue this for the first three years to get your plant well established.