Ceanothus maritimus 'Valley Violet', Valley Violet Mountain Lilac

$12.00 Sale Save
Size 1 Gallon

Item is in stock Only 1 left in stock Item is out of stock Item is unavailable

Ceanothus maritimus 'Valley Violet', Valley Violet Mountain Lilac

 A California native ground cover that grows up to two feet tall and four feet wide.  The purple, blue flowers bloom in the spring.

Pinch and lightly prune in spring after flowering. You can remove flower clusters right after blooming to encourage a denser growth habit.   If given too much water it will be short lived.  You shouldn’t cut into any new growth that is larger around than a pencil.  Larger cuts heal slowly and become infected with apricot dieback fungus, fungal spores are spread by rain.  

Family Name Rhamnaceae
Species Name Ceanothus maritimus 'Valley Violet'
Common Name Valley Violet Mountain Lilac
Native to Cultivar of California plant
Plant Type Groundcover
Height x Width 2’ x 4’
Growth Habit Mounding
Growth Rate Fast
Sun Full, Part Shade, Full Sun
Water Requirement Low
Flower Color Blue, Purple
Flowering Months Spring, Early Summer
Evergreen/Deciduous Evergreen
Fragrant No
Cold Hardy to 15
Attracts Bees, Butterflies
Container Plant No
Erosion Control Yes
Bank Stabilization Yes
Fire Resistant
Deer resistant Yes
Local plant No

This content type will accept rich text to help with adding styles and links to additional pages or content. Use this to add supplementary information to help your buyers.

You can use product metafields to assign content to this tab that is unique to an individual product. Use tabs to highlight unique features, sizing information, or other sales information.

Ceanothus maritimus 'Valley Violet', Valley Violet Mountain Lilac

 A California native ground cover that grows up to two feet tall and four feet wide.  The purple, blue flowers bloom in the spring.

Pinch and lightly prune in spring after flowering. You can remove flower clusters right after blooming to encourage a denser growth habit.   If given too much water it will be short lived.  You shouldn’t cut into any new growth that is larger around than a pencil.  Larger cuts heal slowly and become infected with apricot dieback fungus, fungal spores are spread by rain.  

Family Name Rhamnaceae
Species Name Ceanothus maritimus 'Valley Violet'
Common Name Valley Violet Mountain Lilac
Native to Cultivar of California plant
Plant Type Groundcover
Height x Width 2’ x 4’
Growth Habit Mounding
Growth Rate Fast
Sun Full, Part Shade, Full Sun
Water Requirement Low
Flower Color Blue, Purple
Flowering Months Spring, Early Summer
Evergreen/Deciduous Evergreen
Fragrant No
Cold Hardy to 15
Attracts Bees, Butterflies
Container Plant No
Erosion Control Yes
Bank Stabilization Yes
Fire Resistant
Deer resistant Yes
Local plant No