
Cats prefer catnip. It makes better tea too. Catmint, Nepeta X faassenii, is prettier though. It sprawls over the ground to get about three feet wide, without getting more than two feet deep. Where well exposed, it may not get much deeper than one foot. The aromatic gray foliage is denser than that of related catnip. Its individual leaves are small and furrowed.
Bloom begins with warming spring weather, and continues until cooling autumn weather. Individual flowers are tiny, and suspended on small floral stems. They just happen to be very abundant. Warmth stimulates phases of exceptionally profuse bloom. Floral color is light or pale blue, like faded denim. Shearing to deadhead enhances profusion of bloom.
Catmint works well as a rustic border or a ground cover for small areas. Alternatively, the blue bloom can be a delightful component of mixed perennials, in beds, planters or pots. Deer generally ignore catmint. Bees most definitely do not. They swarm it! ‘Walker’s Low’ is the most popular cultivar. It may be all that is available in some regions. Catmint is sterile, so generates no seedlings.
I have Walker’s Low, and my cat loves smushing his face into it and rolling all over it. Thus, it never attains much size! In spite of the cat’s love, it still comes back every year–this is year 8 for it in my garden.
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It sort of makes one wonder what is so great about it that only kitties know. Most kitties ignore catmint, but shred catnip terribly. When I grew it in town, it was confined to a hanging pot.
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One of my go-to plants for dry, sunny sites at the edge of the border. Almost indestructible in the right spot, and loved by bees.
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Yes, the BEES totally dig it! It is one of those plants that should be more popular here than it is, because it tolerates aridity well.
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