
Nepeta × faassenii
12,42 €
Livré chez vous par Jardiplants, un service Renoday.
Description
Nepeta × faassenii: classic garden catmint for soft edging and summer colour Why Nepeta × faassenii works in outdoor planting Nepeta × faassenii is a hardy perennial catmint grown for scented foliage, violet-blue flowers and a loose mound that settles naturally into border edges. The grey-green leaves give the plant a dry-garden tone even before the flower stems open. In early summer, upright spikes rise above the mound and keep the planting light, soft and busy with insect activity. The overall effect is low, generous and easy to repeat along paths, at the front of mixed borders or around taller shrubs. This is a useful plant when a border needs continuity at knee height. It fills gaps between structural plants, softens paving edges and gives a long flowering season in modest, freely drained soil. The aromatic leaves are part of its value: they bring texture and scent when brushed, and they help the plant feel right in Mediterranean-style, gravel-style and cottage planting. Nepeta × faassenii is also a practical container plant for sunny terraces when drainage is good and the pot is broad enough for the clump to widen. Growth habit, size and seasonal rhythm Expect a rounded, bushy clump that usually reaches about 30 to 50 cm high and 40 to 50 cm wide in open ground. Flower stems lift above the leafy mound, giving the plant its fullest shape during the main bloom period. New shoots emerge fresh from the crown, then the mound thickens quickly as temperatures rise. In open, leaner ground the habit stays more compact. In richer sites the stems can become softer and benefit from a firm trim once the first flowering wave has passed. A pot will generally keep final size more compact than planting into a bed. A pot-grown Nepeta × faassenii still flowers well, but the clump expands at a steadier pace and reacts more quickly to drying. Use a wide container that supports the plant’s broad mound and gives the crown room to widen. In a mixed planter, give it the front or shoulder of the display so the flowers can spill gently over the rim and the leaves stay clear of heavy shade from taller companions. Site, soil and watering cues for Nepeta × faassenii A sunny position gives the densest mound and strongest flowering. Light partial shade is acceptable, especially in hot courtyard conditions, but deep shade weakens the flower display and lengthens stems. Soil should drain well through winter. Chalk, clay, loam and sand can all suit the plant when the structure lets excess water move away from the crown. Heavy clay is usable when improved by raised planting, grit, composted bark or a sloped position that sheds winter rain. Light: Full sun gives the most compact growth; light partial shade is workable. Drainage: Well-drained soil matters most; keep nutrition moderate. pH range: Acid, neutral and alkaline soils are all suitable when drainage is sound. Pot check: Water when the top 20 to 30% of pot depth has dried, then soak evenly. Mulch: A light mineral or fine bark mulch keeps splashing down and crowns open. Feeding: Use only modest feeding in containers to keep stems firm and leafy. New plants need regular watering through the first establishment period. Once rooted into the border, Nepeta × faassenii copes well with drier summer spells. In pots, the plant still depends on the container volume, so check moisture during warm windy weather. The aim is even rehydration followed by a clear drying phase, with air returning to the mix between waterings. Pruning, planting pattern and common issues Plant at about 50 cm spacing for an edge that closes into a soft band. Single plants work well beside steps, in a gravel bed or at the corner of a sunny raised planter. For a more natural rhythm, repeat three to five plants with gaps for bulbs, grasses or compact perennials. The first flush of flowers can be trimmed back hard enough to remove the tired stems and part of the leafy mound; fresh foliage follows quickly and often brings a second display later in summer. In late winter or early spring, clear old stems close to the crown before new shoots stretch. This keeps the plant open and prevents a thatch of old growth from trapping damp at soil level. Main problems are usually linked to heavy wet soil, overly rich growth or poor air movement. Sparse flowering points to shade or late trimming. A collapsing centre on an older clump means division in spring is useful. Young growth can draw slug attention, and dry summer mildew may appear on stressed plants. Best uses and buying note Nepeta × faassenii is strongest as a repeat plant. It frames paths, lightens the base of roses, thfeels through sunny perennial borders and gives containers a softer edge. The flower colour is easy to place with white, pink, purple, silver and warm apricot tones. Because the foliage is aromatic and the flowers are visited by bees and other insects, it adds sensory value with a simple care routine. Choose Nepeta × faassenii when you want a hardy, low mound with long summer colour and a natural feel. Give it drainage, sun and a confident trim after the first flower peak, and it becomes one of those plants that quietly makes a border look more settled every year. Add Nepeta × faassenii to a sunny outdoor scheme when you want softness, scent and a reliable blue-violet season from a compact perennial. Long-season edging details For a continuous edge, plant Nepeta × faassenii close enough that mature mounds touch lightly, but leave enough space for air to pass after rain. The plant is especially good where bulbs or early perennials leave gaps by summer, because the catmint expands just as spring displays fade. A row of plants can guide the eye along a path, while scattered groups make a border feel more relaxed. The grey-green foliage also helps link bright flower colours that might otherwise feel separate. In containers, one plant can fill the front of a medium pot, or several can make a soft trough display. The best results come from a bright position, a mix that drains freely and a trim when the first flush becomes tired. If the plant is cut evenly, the next leafy mound returns with a fresh, balanced outline.
