Wilde Dagga (Leonotus leonurus), packet of 10 seeds, organic

(5 customer reviews)

$4.95

Family:  Mint (Lamiaceae)

Hardy to Zones 9 to 12

(Wild dagga, Lion’s Tail, Lion’s Ears, Umunyane) Herbaceous or woody perennial. When growing in colder zones, these can be very late to re-emerge from the woody stumps of the previous year’s growth.  Flowers in the late season on multiple upright stalks, occurring as long-tubed, hairy appendages emerging from the globose, whorled orbs.  Hummingbirds become frenzied around this plant, and I’ve had them fly in through the door of the greenhouse (and risk hitting their little heads) in order to repeatedly visit a single flower that was making an out-of-season display.  Easily one of the showiest medicinals of all time. Native to South Africa and planted in discriminating botanical gardens worldwide. When encountered on garden path, it is a breathtaker.  Traditional usage (African tribal): The orange flowers are a smokable euphoric, source of phytocannabinoids.  The leaf material was traditionally used as a poultice or decoction for treating insect stings and bites of venemous snakes, wounds, boils, eczema and other skin diseases.  Taken internally for the treatment of malaria, diabetes, also demonstrating a cardiotonic and hypotensive effect.  Coughs, colds, influenza, bropnchitis, asthma and viral hepatitis.  Source of diterpenoic marrubiin. Plant prefers full sun to part shade and regular garden or wayside conditions.  Since the stems can become quite woody, it holds up well to traffic and random abuse.  Well-drained, slightly alkaline soils seem to be the best choice, although almost any soil will work as long as the summer is hot and long.  The plant is quite drought tolerant.  Sow seeds in a flat or pot.  Barely cover, tamp well, keep evenly moist, warm and in the light until germination, which occurs in 1 to 3 weeks.  The seedlings are valuable and so normally not thinned–grow at close spacing for a few weeks until the second set of true leaves has formed, then prick into pots, and then after they grow out a bit more, transplant outdoors to 3 feet apart.  In cold weather areas, you may wish to keep this plant in potted culture.

10 seeds per packet, certified organically grown

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  1. Question

    Colleen

    Hi, I’m currently growing L. nepetifolia because it’s all I could find until now. (Your selection is amazing!) I’ve heard L. leonurus is medically superior, but I’m wondering if it’s as painfully stabby as klip dagga? Also does it spread as profusely? My zone 10 garden is full of stabby klip dagga plants now….

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    • Richo Cech

      Richo Cech

      hi colleen, i’m pretty sure its the dried receptacle of klip dagga, the rounded portion left over after the flowers dehisce, that you’re talking about, that is pokey. The true wilde dagga (Leonotis leonurus) is not so pokey, I’ve been squeezing out seeds all morning and haven’t been poked once. As a perennial, the true wilde dagga is clump-forming and i’ve never seen it volunteer–it is the annual species that like to do that. r

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    • A.N.

      Hello, between L nepetifolia or L leonurus, is one easier to grow than the other (apart from zone)? Also, are medicinal uses the same for both? thanks!

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    • Richo Cech

      Richo Cech

      Hello A.N., Thanks for writing! The nepetifolia is easier to grow and faster to flower. The flowers of leonurus and nepetifolia are hard to tell apart and have the same functionality. richo

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  2. jasperdshide

    Full of vigor

    jasperdshide (verified owner)

    I found the seeds a bit finicky to get started – warmth and light seem to be key and it may be beneficial to provide cooler nighttime temperatures too. Seedlings can be acclimated to drier conditions pretty quickly and it’s hard to overstate how quick these plants grow, especially when given rich soil or fertilizer. They’ll get absolutely massive if you let them so plan accordingly!

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  3. Question

    ycleptj

    I’m sorry to have omitted that basic info. Zone 9b, which some are already reclassifying as 10a in these days of global warming (California Bay Area), so our growing season is very long. But I will do as you suggest and hope for a happy result! Thanks.

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    • Diana

      Diana

      These flower reliably in the bay area–check them at golden gate park. try to plant it in the ground if possible. r

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    • Sean R Brown

      I grow it as an annual in central illinois. I had it come back from seed after growing it in 17. It came back but very late and didnt flower in 18

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  4. Question

    Allegra Chesnut

    I grew this plant from seed (from SMS) four years ago. The first year it shot up to ten feet and bloomed like a champ. The next three years, nada, zero blooming. The plant is healthy to say the least, though after the first year it grew to a more seemly 4 feet. I have it in a 24″ diameter pot, 20″ high. Do you have any idea why it won’t bloom for me anymore? I’ve tried extra phosphorous and little nitrogen (it seems to need little fertilizer to grow lush foliage) but without success. I would be grateful for any insight you have. I’m at my wits’ ends. Clearly it’s unhappy about something but I really can’t figure it out. Thanks.

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    • Richo Cech

      Admin Richo Cech

      Hi Allegra, I can’t remember where you’re from and a long season is generally needed for blooming. You can depot, cut back roots, cut back aerials, and give it new potting soil. If you do this in the spring, this would be a restart button and it will probably act like the plant did the first year. r

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  5. Question

    Samantha Dover

    Drought tolerant, but what about high humidity? SC summers are brutal.

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  6. Allegra

    Allegra

    My leonotus are the most eye-catching plants I grow, but be prepared for them to get as high as 15 feet (if you prune a bit they’ll stay shorter). Even before they flower the growth is striking: bright green and very dense, and when the orange flowers appear they’re breathtaking. This is their second season and they came back from the roots even more vigorous than they were in their first year. This was one of the most challenging plants I’ve ever grown from seed — germination was slow and spotty — but even a single plant makes all the effort worthwhile. The medicinal qualities of leonotus are really just the icing on the cake of this amazing plant.

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