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Sage, Dominican (Salvia dominica) potted plant, organic

(2 customer reviews)

$8.50

Family:  Mint (Lamiacea)

Hardy to Zones 7 to 11

Woody perennial native to the Middle East.  One of the desired small sized sages, flowering from 2 to 3 feet. The plant is fuzzy and soft, bearing large flowers, white and yellow with lavender highlights. The entire plant, including leaf, stem and flowers, is redolent with the unique, fruity scent of linalool. In this way, it is more universally aromatic than Clary sage, which it distantly resembles.  Useful in perfumery, cosmetics and in the production of the rare essential oil. The plant thrives in our gardens, and even the seed of it seems charged with special energy.  This is one of the more worthwhile species we have brought to the temperate US, and we wish more people availed themselves of it, it is choice.  The original accession was from coastal Israel. Plant prefers full sun and fast-draining, sandy soil.  Very drought tolerant.  Space plants 2 to 3 feet apart.

Potted plant, Certified Organically Grown

 

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5 out of 5 stars

2 reviews

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What others are saying

  1. Jonathan

    Divine sage

    Jonathan

    I encountered this stunning plant in full bloom last Sept in a mountainous region of central Italy with my wife on our honeymoon. The scent was intoxicating, sublime, like clary sage but more ethereal. I think of clary sage as a very sexy plant—serious hormonal activation—and this had some of that only on a higher octave, suggestive of divine love,
    mystic eros… I was so thrilled to see that SMS carries this species that I hadn’t imagined was in cultivation. Even the little seedlings are already redolent of that magic scent. Cant wait for the bloom

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    • Richo Cech

      Admin Richo Cech

      Thank you for the engaging post. Our’s came originally from the Middle East and we’ve found it to be returning, robust, reliable and like you say . . . redolent in our Z 7 gardens.

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    • Andrew Harrington

      I have planted this in the ground in Austin Texas. Sunny hilltop site with very alkaline (limestone) soils. It has done very well after about 3-4 years. In harsh winters it has died to the ground but come back. This year we did not freeze too hard (low maybe around 22-deg F) and now in late February it is fully flowering, gorgeous and majestic. LOVE this one. I’m wondering if one plant alone will produce viable seeds?

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    • Richo Cech

      Richo Cech

      Hi Andrew, Thanks for writing. It is just great to get perspective from people growing these rarities in various climes. You’ll love “Growing Plant Medicine Vol 2” where on pg 96 it says of Salvia dominica: “Flowers are hermaphroditic and bee pollinated.” These are self-fertile and one plant will make seeds. It will make more and better seeds when grown in a patch. Forge on! Richo

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