Search
Customer Login

Verbena x 'Homestead Purple'

Rose Verbena or Homestead Purple Verbena

Named by Dr. Alan Armitage, of the University of Georgia. Vigorously
spreading, deep purple clusters from June to November. Excellent clean,
deep green foliage with a trailing habit. Has been surviving the winter here
lately, but it gets a very slow start in the spring. Best treated as an annual
zone 6 or less.


Height

10-12 Inches

Spread

18 Inches

Bloom Color

Purple

USDA Hardiness Zone 7-10

Interesting Notes

Perennials have captured the hearts of gardeners throughout the nation.
Hundreds of new plants have appeared in our gardens in the last decade,
including Homestead Purple verbena. It's such an outstanding plant that it
was selected as an Arkansas Select plant for 2001.

Since its introduction in the early 1990s, Homestead Purple has sparked
widespread interest in all things verbena and has spurred the introduction of
over 40 new hardy types.

This rampant perennial grows to 3-feet wide and a foot tall and is topped
with a mass of bright purple blooms that start in the spring and continue
until frost. Its leaves are deep green, scalloped, coarse-textured and up to
4 inches long.

The plant's stem trails across the ground and turns up at the tips. Flowers
are borne in finger-like spikes that are held above the foliage. The flowers
grow to 3 inches long and are crowded with individual five-petaled, trumpet-
shaped florets.

Homestead Purple is listed as a cultivar of Verbena canadensis, which grows
wild throughout the southeast, including all of Arkansas, and ranges as far
north as Zone 5 in Iowa. The species is a perennial, but a temperamental
one that is very particular about its exposure and drainage, especially during
the winter.

In all probability, Homestead Purple is a chance hybrid with another verbena
species because its identifying characteristics and vigor are not characteristic
of the straight species.

The discovery of the plant is due to the keen eyes of two University of
Georgia horticulture professors, Alan Armitage and Mike Dirr. Armitage is one
of the nation's foremost authorities on perennial plants, while Dirr is the
undisputed woody plant guru.

The two were returning to Athens, Ga., when they drove past a purple mass
of flowers neither recognized. They did a U-turn and asked the lady who lived
on the homestead about the plant. She didn't know much about it 
apparently it had been growing there for years. They collected cuttings and
the plant went on to fame and glory.

Since 1998, the University of Arkansas and the greenhouse and nursery
industry, now combined into the Arkansas Green Industries Association, have
met and selected plants to designate as Arkansas Select plants. The criteria
for selection are that the plant be relatively new, that it be adapted
throughout the state, and that it be easy to grow. Homestead Purple meets
these criteria admirably.

Purple is a color that may scare some gardeners, but the vivid rich purple of
Homestead Purple combines well with most other colors. It's an especially
good foil for pastel-colored flowers when it's used at the front of the border
or in a rock garden.

Homestead Purple should be placed in full sun in a well drained soil. Like
most fast growing perennials, it responds well to good soil preparation and
occasional fertilization.

This past winter, gardeners in the northern part of the state did lose the
plant, probably as much due to wet soil during the winter as the cold. But
it should overwinter successfully nine out of 10 Arkansas winters.

Homestead Purple is such a rampant grower that it will quickly fill in any
open space. Occasionally it will have a small amount of insect damage on
its leaves, but its impressive growth rate and abundant flower production
quickly hides any signs of injury.
(http://www.arhomeandgarden.org/plantoftheweek/articles/
Homestead_Purple_Verbena.asp)

Growing and Maintenance Tips

V. canadensis can be found in Pennsylvania to Illinois and Colorado south to Texas and Florida. Prefers moist to dry, well-drained soils in partial shade,
but can tolerate drier soils. Propagate by seed or cuttings. Best used as a groundcover or in rock gardens.

Characteristics & Attributes

Attributes
Drought Tolerant
Rock Garden
Ground Cover
Dry Sun
Container
Native to US
Edging
Critter Resistance
Deer Resistant
Exposure
Sun
Growth Rate
Fast
Nature Attraction
Butterflies
Season of Interest (Flowering)
Fall
Summer
Late Summer
Late Spring / Early Summer
Soil Moisture Needs
Good Drainage
Dry
Average