If the seed pods are left over winter, they will produce little seedlings, but they are easy to pull out.Trimming foliage after bloom helps maintain a rounded plant appearance, but you will miss out on the attractive seed pods which are great to use in dried flower arrangements.Propagate by seed sown in pots in a cold frame as soon as seed is ripe or propagate by division in early spring.Great as a specimen plant or in small groups. Looks stunning in beds and borders, cottage gardens, prairies or meadows, and native plant gardens.Not susceptible to pest damage or disease.Attracts scores of butterflies and hummingbirds.Baptisia is rarely bothered by deer as they consider it unpalatable and is rabbit resistant RT chicagobotanic: Blue Wild Indigo (Baptisia australis) is blooming at the Garden.Do not disturb once established as it develops a deep taproot that is easily damaged if you try to transplant it. Its requirements are fairly simple: Full sun in average, dry to medium, well-drained soils. Although it will grow in some shade, this plant tends to become leggy and may require staking. Tolerates poor soils and drought.Spreads by underground rhizomes and typically grows up to 4 ft.Blooming in late spring to early summer, it is an extremely valuable addition to the garden and its seedpods help create lovely winter decorations.Bred at the Chicago Botanic Garden, this hybrid Baptisia is vigorous, tough, long-lived, and enjoys a long season of interest. If left untrimmed, the plant forms interesting seedpods turning charcoal-black in the fall and persisting into winter. When the flowers fade away, the lovely blue-green foliage, which forms a beautiful broad, rounded shrub, remains neat all season and creates a lovely backdrop for the other perennials in the garden. Borne on gracefully arching branches, they last for up to 4 weeks and attract butterflies, bees, and hummingbirds. long (12 cm), further extending its flowering season. It is quickly followed by a second cycle, which produces blooms on secondary branches with inflorescences up to 5 in. The first cycle produces long flower spikes up to 24 in. Unlike most False Indigos, this plant has two bloom cycles within its blooming season. (60 cm), bearing deep blue-violet flowers. If the seed pods are left over winter, they will produce little seedlings, but they are easy to pull out.Noted for its long blooming season, Baptisia 'Midnight' is an upright perennial bearing a profusion of extremely long inflorescences, 24 in.Propagate by seed sown in pots in a cold frame as soon as the seed is ripe or propagate by division in early spring.Not susceptible to pest damage or disease Common Name: blue false indigo Type: Herbaceous perennial Family: Fabaceae Native Range: Eastern United States Zone: 3 to 9 Height: 3.00 to 4.00 feet Spread: 3.00 to 4.Baptisia is rarely bothered by deer as they consider it unpalatable and is rabbit resistant.Do not disturb once established as it develops a deep taproot that is easily damaged if you try to transplant it. Although it will grow in some shade, this plant tends to become leggy and may require staking. Its requirements are fairly simple: Full sun in average, dry to medium, well-drained soils.
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