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Seasonal observations of the UCCE Master Gardeners
Flowers
Comments:
by Andrea
on June 16, 2019 at 8:51 AM
Lilacina de la Mina, the beautiful California native verbena, does not suffer from the pernicious Benicia mildew in my garden.
by Jessica Bell
on August 10, 2020 at 1:02 PM
Thank you for a well written article that addressed powdery mildew on verbena specifically, as well as under which general conditions this mildew thrives. I now better understand why a handful of my plants are getting this disease two years in a row.
by Linda
on November 1, 2020 at 10:31 AM
The first year (late summer 2018) that I planted a verbena bonariensis it had no trouble with mildew, and the plant got huge. Easily 6 feet tall, and lots of branches, so wide as well. It lasted through early 2020 with just a little bit of mildew now & then in 2019. Then spring 2020 it just kind of died back. Of course it provided plenty of seedlings, so I replaced it with one of those. But all the volunteers that have emerged in 2020, including the one I put in the same spot as the first, have had lots of mildew this year.  
 
One thing I note is that 2018 we had lots of rain, 2019 we had a reasonable amount, but this year, much less. I have been watering regularly. I have been debating taking it out completely this fall, but I may try cutting it back and see if it might recover with less disease.  
 
I'm in Berkeley.
by Erin Mahaney
on November 2, 2020 at 7:24 AM
Thank you for the information and suggestions! Despite different water year types over the past few years, the mildew persists, so I'm now trying different cultivars and locations. I just planted a shorter cultivar to try near the same location (6 hours sun, drip irrigation): Verbena lilacina 'De La Mina.' It might get a few more minutes of sun than the previous location, but not much. I'll try Verbena bonariensis 'Lollipop' in a sunnier location. I really enjoy the taller version, however, so I've left the "volunteers" that have sprouted in a sunnier part of the yard. I'll be curious to see what works and what doesn't this next year!
 
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