Lambs Ear
Beautiful pastel colors for the garden. Nice soft foilage like a lambs ear.
Lamb's Ears is the perfect example of plant
over planter (and we mean the person doing the planting not a cute little pot).
So widely grown and cultivated that it seems to be a native of almost
everywhere. Actually, it is native to Northern Turkey, the Southern Caucasus
Mountain region and Southern Iran where it grows on rocky hills and
scrub areas. In other words, it is a weed. Which is exactly the quality it makes
apparent in a rational planned garden. Like many weeds we adopt, it does its own
thing. This makes it important to use it the right way in your garden and not
try to make it something it isn't. For instance, it isn't the border plant to
end all border plants. The potted plants are so cute and they look so nice when
you line the driveway with them, but this is a mistake. Why? Because they aren't
going to stay there. Now don't get me wrong, I don't mean they are going to
sneak off in the middle of the night or anything as clandestine as that. What
they do is grow outward from the center and leave a nice bare spot in the
middle. This usually starts happening after they finish blooming.
While Lamb's Ears can take partial shade,
they can't take excess water, which makes them a poor choice for planting near a
lawn.
So what are they good for? Pure pleasure. Let them
be free and they will spread their seeds and grace the garden with their downy
softness and tall graceful purple flower heads. Here a Lamb's Ear and there a
Lamb's ear, almost everywhere there will be a Lamb's ear, and you will be glad
you let them have their way.
Oh, and some of you may wonder why an Herb Company
grows Lamb's Ears. While there are a few folkloric references to herbal
uses for Lamb's Ears, like to staunch wounds (thus the old name
woundwort) and as a washcloth, it has a home here because of its association
with the medicinal herb Betony. Both are in the genus Stachys and we tend to
collect as many members of any herbal genus as possible. We don't always like
all the different species, but Lamb's Ears found a permanent, yet
variable, spot in our gardens.
Just a note about the variety of Lamb's
Ears that do not bloom; they are slow. We did trial these years ago in the
hope that they would be a better border plant or perennial addition to the
garden. But, we weren't too impressed. Our original clumps are still in the
garden. Over 8 or 10 years they have gone from 6 inch mounds to eighteen inch
mounds; a little too tame for us. http://www.mountainvalleygrowers.com/stalanata.htm