Artemisia stelleriana 'Silver Brocade'
Wormwood 'Silver Brocade'
Common Wormwood has aromatic leaves (from which the oil used to make Absinthe is obtained). The silvery leaves are arranged spirally, and the clusters of pale yellow tubular flowers appear from early Summer to early Autumn. It is an easy, low-maintenance plant that will tolerate poor soil, as long as the soil is free-draining. 'Silver Brocade' is a low-growing,mat-forming, hardy wormwood, with silver-white scalloped foliage. Makes very good ground-cover, or can be used for edging. Also good in containers and hanging-baskets.Cut back hard in mid-Summer to keep it low-growing and tidy
Contributed by @ofthought
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Full sun
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Very little water
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Full Frost Hardy: 5F (-15°C)
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Free draining
Common name
Wormwood 'Silver Brocade'
Latin name
Artemisia stelleriana 'Silver Brocade'
type
Herbaceous Perennials
family
Asteraceae
ph
5.5 - 8.0 Acid - Neutral
Plant & bloom calendar
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Best time to plant
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When the plant will bloom
full grown dimensions
Artemisia stelleriana 'Silver Brocade'
Common Wormwood has aromatic leaves (from which the oil used to make Absinthe is obtained). The silvery leaves are arranged spirally, and the clusters of pale yellow tubular flowers appear from early Summer to early Autumn. It is an easy, low-maintenance plant that will tolerate poor soil, as long as the soil is free-draining. 'Silver Brocade' is a low-growing,mat-forming, hardy wormwood, with silver-white scalloped foliage. Makes very good ground-cover, or can be used for edging. Also good in containers and hanging-baskets.Cut back hard in mid-Summer to keep it low-growing and tidy
Flowering
From Early Summer TO Early Autumn
The flowering season is from early Summer to early Autumn
Planting
From Early Spring TO Early Spring
Plant in early Spring in a sunny site where the soil is free-draining. (It doesn't matter if the soil is poor, as long as it is free-draining). Water the newly-planted plant well, and keep watering regularly until the plant is established.
Propagating by seed
From Late Summer TO Mid Autumn
This plant self-seeds readily. More of a problem is stopping it from self-seeding!
Propagating by cuttings
From Late Spring TO Early Summer
Take softwood cuttings from new growth early in the day in Spring or early Summer. Cut, neatly, a 4" approx. piece of a non-flowering shoot, pinch out the tip, and cut off the bottom leaves. Dip the bottom of the cutting in hormone rooting powder, and carefully place in a pot of cutting compost with the leaves just above the level of the compost. Water, label, cover with a polythene bag, and place in a warm, bright place, out of direct sunlight. Take the polythene bag off periodically for a while for ventilation (at least twice a week)