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Old May 16, 2009   #1
piegirl
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Default lemon verbena flowers

Every year I grow at least one lemon verbena in my herb garden because it is just so wonderful smelling. I bought mine two weeks ago and noticed today it has flowers forming - still in the 3 x 3 pot! How unusual is this? The plant is maybe 6-8 inches tall. piegirl
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Old May 17, 2009   #2
veggie babe
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mine are doing the same thing. This is my first year to grow it so I have no clue what to expect.

neva
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Old May 17, 2009   #3
Polar_Lace
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lemon verbena

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia:
Lemon verbena

Phytochemicals: Lemon Verbena, Aloysia tiphylla

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Old May 18, 2009   #4
habitat_gardener
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My lemon verbena has not come back yet and looks dead. I had it in a large container for a year or two, then in the ground for a couple years, so it survived at least 3-4 winters. I've seen small lemon verbena trees in this area, but my garden site gets cold winds, and it was not mulched as deeply as in previous years. Sigh.

A couple years ago, I offered a sprig of lemon verbena to someone who was walking through the community garden. She said she had small children and had to get out of the house for a little while. When she smelled the lemon verbena, she said it revived her.

I'd planted it where I'd brush against it frequently. I already miss it, but I have a few other lemony plants: lemon balm, lemon thyme, and lemongrass, as well as a meyer lemon.
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Old June 9, 2009   #5
habitat_gardener
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A few days after the last message, I weeded around the base of the "dead" lemon verbena, added mulch, and smelled lemon verbena! It had tiny new leaves emerging from the base, instead of from the branches, as in previous years. The new sprouts are still small, and I keep tripping over the dead branches (it was planted at the side of a path, which has now become the middle of a path). I'm happy it's back and amazed at its regenerative power.
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Old July 12, 2012   #6
Deborah
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I pinch mine at the top to force the plant to grow bushy. I remove flowers because I try to keep it going as long as possible.
You can prune it for winter and it'll come back. Just leave stalks about 6 inches tall.
I LOVE lemon verbena !

Last edited by Deborah; July 12, 2012 at 04:15 AM. Reason: Typos bug me !
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Old July 13, 2012   #7
biscgolf
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you can also overwinter it inside if you are in a colder climate- key is to let it go dormant and lay off the watering in the winter time. i have a plant that is roughly 20 years old at this point.
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Old August 2, 2012   #8
BarbJ
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I love Lemon Verbena too! I find the flowers have a vanilla like scent though, not lemon like the leaves. It's not a strong scent like the leaves and best to smell them early in the morning.

I used to have a large bush where I chose a strong center stalk and trimmed away the rest to make a small tree. It was so pretty that way! I also found after it was about 5 years old I didn't have to protect it in winter anymore. Seemed like the more winters it made it through the stronger it became. This of course only works in mild winter areas, lol!
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