Plant Select announces new introductions for 2023

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By Robin Young | PREVIEW Columnist

Following are the new introductions that you can purchase for your gardens in 2023. These are the plants that did well during their trial period and were chosen to be Plant Select plants.

Ultra Violet Salvia or Salvia “Ultra Violet” PP 21,411 is more cold hardy and more compact than most salvia greggii. It has iridescent, deep purple flowers that bloom in late summer. This is a xeric plant that establishes easily in the garden. It is rabbit and deer resistant. Better Homes and Gardens magazine lists it as a top perennial for dry sites.

Tidy littleleaf peashrub or Caragana microphylla: Tidy grows to be a large shrub or small tree depending on how you prune it. It has airy, bright green, fern-like foliage. In the spring, it produces showy yellow flowers. Like other peashrubs, this one also takes the heat well, cold well, poor soils and xeric conditions. It can be used in a windbreak, for bird habitat or to add to the landscape design. If you choose to grow it as a tree, it was selected because of its reduced suckering.

Shim “Shimmer” PP19,663 is native plant for Kansas and Nebraska. It is a great pollinator plant and groundcover. It attracts bees, sphinx moths and butterflies. It has cheerful, large, lemon-yellow flowers that bloom profusely in late spring and re-bloom in the summer and fall, filling the evening air with a beautiful scent.

Bellina pink cornflower or psephellus simplicicaulis is a small-scale ground cover which blooms from spring through summer. This flowering period makes it a long bloomer. This is a plant that spreads slowly. It will eventually spread to be 18 inches wide. It has frilly, matte-green leaves that have a silver hue on the underside, yielding a captivating texture. The showy, bachelor button-type flowers have pale pink centers. This plant has a form and habit ideal for rock gardens, borders or even cut flowers.

SILVER TOTEM® buffaloberry or shepherdia argentea “Totem” is a shrub with an upright, columnar growth habit that is native in the western states and across the plains. It requires sunny, dry locations, and tolerates heat and drought. It also can do just as well in moist conditions. It blooms in spring with tiny yellow clusters of flowers. Its leaves are narrow and are silvery green in color.

Tushar Bluemat Penstemon or penstemon xylus is named because it comes from Tushar Mountain range in Utah. It blooms June through August with lavender-blue flowers. Equally attractive is its steel blue foliage, which is evergreen in the winter. This adds to its interest in the landscape. It requires full sun and gritty soils. It is ideal for rock gardens, crevice gardens or troughs.

Upcoming classes

Please visit our Facebook page and website to register for the following events.

Jan. 23 — Cottage foods online certification, 1 to 5 p.m.

Jan. 31 (six weeks) — Colorado Building Farmers online class. This class will help you build a business plan.

Feb. 8 (six weeks) — Seed to Supper. A growers guide to low-cost vegetable gardening in Archuleta County, 6-8 p.m. in the Pagosa Lakes Property Owners Association conference room.

March 2 — Livestock and Forage Growers Online Update. A Western Slope outlook.

March 18 — Seed Class and Swap, 10 a.m. to 1 p.m.

Look for upcoming classes on the Colorado State University (CSU) Extension — Archuleta County Facebook page.

CPR and first aid classes

CPR and first aid certification classes are offered monthly by the CSU Extension office, generally on the second Monday and Wednesday of each month from 6 to 10 p.m. The cost for the classes is $80 for combined CPR/first aid and $55 for CPR, first aid or recertification. Call the Extension office at (970) 246-5931 to register.

Visit online

Visit us on the Web at https://archuleta.extension.colostate.edu/ or like us on Facebook and get more information: https://www.facebook.com/CSUARCHCTY and https://www.facebook.com/ArchuletaCounty4H.