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Pink Cat Catmint in the GardenTags plant encyclopedia

Nepeta nervosa 'Pink Cat'

 

Pink Cat Catmint

Nepeta are mostly herbaceous perennial plants, but some are annuals. They have sturdy stems with green to gray-green leaves which are usually aromatic. Cultivated as ornamental plants, they can be drought tolerant with long blooming periods from late spring to autumn. 'Pink Cat' sports intense pink catmint flowers on long, fat bottlebrushes which stand upright above nice, pointed creased green leaves. Bees just love it.

 
plant Features
  • Pink Cat Catmint likes full sun to partial shade

    Full sun to partial shade

  • Pink Cat Catmint likes very little water

    Very little water

  • Pink Cat Catmint is frost hardy: 23f (-5°c)

    Frost Hardy: 23F (-5°C)

  • Pink Cat Catmint likes free draining

    Free draining

 
plant information

Common name

Pink Cat Catmint

Latin name

Nepeta nervosa 'Pink Cat'

type

Herbaceous Perennials

family

Lamiaceae

ph

5.0 - 8.0 Acid - Neutral

  • Light

    Pink Cat Catmint likes full sun to partial shade

    Full sun to partial shade

  • Frost

    Pink Cat Catmint is frost hardy: 23f (-5°c)

    Frost Hardy: 23F (-5°C)

  • Soil

    Pink Cat Catmint likes free draining

    Free draining

  • Water

    Pink Cat Catmint likes very little water

    Very little water

Plant & bloom calendar

  •  
    Best time to plant

full grown dimensions

The size of a fully grown Pink Cat Catmint is 0.30meters x 0.40meters 0.30 M 0.40 M

Nepeta nervosa 'Pink Cat'

Nepeta are mostly herbaceous perennial plants, but some are annuals. They have sturdy stems with green to gray-green leaves which are usually aromatic. Cultivated as ornamental plants, they can be drought tolerant with long blooming periods from late spring to autumn. 'Pink Cat' sports intense pink catmint flowers on long, fat bottlebrushes which stand upright above nice, pointed creased green leaves. Bees just love it.


Planting young plants

From Early Spring TO Early Spring

Catmint and Catnip plants grow best when they receive full sun, but they will tolerate and may even require some afternoon shade, especially in hot summer regions. They are not overly fussy about the soil they are planted in, as long as it is very well-drained. Catmints and Catnip are very drought tolerant plants that actually prefer soil that is kept on the drier side.

 

Propagation by seed

From Early Spring TO Early Spring

Catmint seeds are sterile and are of no use for propagation. Catnip seeds can be sowed directly in the garden, in the spring as soon as the soil is workable. Seeds started indoors should be kept at 60°-70° during germination, which only takes 7-10 days. Set your new plants 6"-15" apart in the garden after all danger of frost has passed.

 
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