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Grow Monarda Varieties: Bee Balm, Bergamot, Oswego and Horsemint

By KBBEditor on February 1, 2018 Visit KBB's Website.

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I’ve found that herb gardeners are rarely solitary folks absorbed in pursuing perfect plants. When working in the garden, they often trail a friend or neighbor, sharing volumes of knowledge. They’ll pluck sprigs with abandon, encouraging visitors to “sniff this — taste that — please take this one home. My seeds came up so well this year, I’ve got extra!” Herbs bring on sociability.

It’s easy to imagine that favorite herbs mirror the qualities of favorite people. They’re the herbs that are easy to crow about to friends. They offer not only beloved flavors and fragrances, but almost human virtues: stalwart assertiveness, hidden vulnerabilities, astounding generosity. It’s natural for gardeners to surround themselves with botanical companions that reflect their individuality.

A steady, reliable friend

Both intuition and objectivity guide my choice of Monarda — known also as bee balm, Oswego tea, horsemint, or bergamot — as one of my best friends in the herb garden. I first met beautiful, wild Monarda didyma in the woodlands and meadows of North Carolina. These wild plants were far too robust for the small garden I had then, but they were unforgettable: lush scarlet blooms, tall stems, an earthy rootedness. Good looks, however, aren’t the herb’s only fine quality.

Monarda’s flavor and past use in healing stem from its membership in the Labiatae (formerly Lamiaceae) family — the same plant group that includes mints, lavender, rosemary, and many other plants with valuable aromatic, even pungent, essential oils. Monarda’s essential oils, concentrated primarily in the leaves and blooms, contain varying concentrations of thymol, a proven antioxidant with antibiotic properties; geraniol, a valuable perfume-industry component with a rose-geranium scent; and other oils. The fragrances of different species and cultivars may resemble lavender, lavender-eucalyptus, Greek oregano, thyme, lemon, or other combinations

The class clown of plants

Shared laughter makes friendship a pleasure, and Monarda provides plenty of humor in the garden. As it emerges in early spring, perennial monarda seems to smile an early green grin from beneath last year’s debris. It grows quickly, and soon its strong, square stalks and opposing leaves wave a breezy hello from the back of the garden.

In summer, Monarda punks out with silly, spiky blooms. Emerging slowly from the round bud’s equator, the small, lipped florets form a colorful circlet with green or red-tinted bracts below and a pin-cushion-like center. As the florets mature, fade, and finally drop, the center increasingly resembles a balding pate. Some species sprout subsequent bloom stalks from the balding pate’s center, a sight that sometimes recalls Dr. Seuss.

Monarda attracts other garden friends, too, from morning until night. During early morning garden rounds, I sometimes see hummingbirds sipping sweet nectar from Monarda, despite the fact that hummingbirds are scarce in my Zone 5 Colorado plains garden. During the day, butterflies flit from one bloom to another along with bees and other pollinators. In the cool evenings, hawk moths, also called sphinx moths, buzz softly among the Monarda blossoms.

Meet Monarda

Monarda is fragrant, flavorful, adaptable, and fuss-free. It’s beautiful, too. Here are Monarda’s vital statistics.

Monarda is an erect, clump-forming herbaceous plant native to about two-thirds of North America, including desert and shaded woodlands. Species may be perennial or annual; only the annual M. citriodora is cultivated for the herb and horticultural market. Hardiness ranges from Zone 4 to Zone 11. Stems are square and leaves opposite in shapes ranging from thin and lance-shaped to oval with pointed tips.

Monarda’s height, depending on the species and cultivar, ranges from 12 to 60 inches. Bloom occurs in mid- to late summer, and blossom colors include white and shades of pink, lavender, red, and purple.

Reproduction occurs by seed (in annuals) or underground stolons (in perennials). Although perennials produce seed, it germinates poorly. To best propagate the plant, divide the roots in early spring.

Monarda‘s history

Monarda’s relatives may have greeted mine on the eastern shores; early European colonists learned to use the plant from the Oswego Indians, who crushed its leaves for an impromptu poultice to soothe pain from insect stings. Made into a mild tea — Oswego tea—the leaves eased indigestion. In 1773, colonists rebelling against England’s excessive taxes crept onto English ships and dumped a fortune in English tea into the harbor. The Boston Tea Party’s rowdiness led promptly to empty teacups, until colonists discovered Oswego tea.

Monarda also lent a hand to the Shaker communities. During their heyday, from the late 1700s to mid 1800s, the Shakers cultivated, processed, packaged, and sold many medicinal herbs and eventually supplied the entire young nation’s pharmaceutical industry. As the Shakers promoted Monarda, many throughout the nation came to know and love their Oswego tea.

Monarda’s popularity continued as the herb entered the Materia Medica, or book of medicinal herbs, of the Eclectic physicians. Dedicated to clinical research and using herbs for healing, the Eclectics held sway in healing from about 1850 until the 1930s. They prescribed Monarda tea to settle the stomach, bring on menstrual periods, ease flatulence, and increase urinary function.

Outside the horticultural industry, Monarda is no longer considered a cash crop, but a northern native Monarda with a particularly intense essential-oil concentration is now under experimental cultivation in Manitoba, Canada. As study continues, Monarda may again be cultivated for the perfume industry.

Assertive, but not aggressive

Monarda carries one more Labiatae characteristic: stolons. When I saw my second-year monarda increasing by this method, visions of long-past mint wars flashed before my eyes. Had I unwittingly doomed my herb garden to sneaky little Monardas forever sprouting from underground runners?

I quickly discovered that Monarda stolons lie close to the surface, and in my dry herb garden, they don’t travel far in any single season — perhaps 6 or 8 inches per year. I contain the Monarda patch with simple plastic lawn edging inserted about 4 inches deep. I also frequently dig out 4 by 4-inch sections to transplant or share with fellow herb gardeners. With this encouragement, Monarda respects its boundaries as does any good friend. If you give Monarda prime conditions and ignore it, the herb can become invasive.

The co-dependent gardener

Some gardeners adore whiny, high-maintenance plants — cultivars that collapse without home-brewed fertilizer, grow monstrous without frequent pinching and pruning, or attract every pest imaginable. In my opinion, the surface beauty of these plants merely masks their demanding nature. I prefer instead such herbs as Monarda: healthy, self-sufficient, and able to endure the benign neglect that friendship sometimes requires.

Few pests bother Monarda — except powdery mildew. The herb is prone to this fungi’s attacks, especially when it is stressed. One exceptionally hot, humid summer, my Monarda grew furry with the grayish stuff, and the leaves curled and dropped. I cut the stalks to just above the ground, expecting the Monarda to die. The following spring, however, it bounced back green and healthy, and since then mildew has seldom bothered it.

I’ve recently learned that powdery mildew rarely hurts healthy Monardas. It doesn’t seem to spread to other herbs, and one bad year of powdery mildew won’t doom a whole patch. If the disease strikes — usually in late summer — promptly cut the infected stalks to the ground and discard them (but not to the compost pile!). This step opens the Monarda patch to better air circulation, slowing the mildew’s spread. Other gardeners surround Monarda with tall herbs to hide the mildewed stalks.

I’ve found home remedies to be ineffective against powdery mildew, and I prefer not to resort to chemical means of control; I just cut back the infected plants and live with it. You could use antifungal spray, but I believe such severe measures are unwarranted.

The most effective way to defend against powdery mildew is to choose resistant M. x media hybrids. Developed by professional plant breeders, cultivars such as ‘Marshall’s Delight’, ‘Raspberry Wine’, and ‘Violet Queen’ seldom, if ever, have problems with the disease. Each year new resistant cultivars arrive in garden centers, providing ever more choices.

A Monarda for you

Unless you garden in an area of extreme cold, prolonged heat and humidity, or nematode-infested soil, there’s a monarda waiting to befriend you. Monarda species are native to about two-thirds of North America — excluding only the western deserts and coasts, the northern and northwestern reaches of Canada, and tropical areas fraught with heat and high humidity, such as southern Florida, Hawaii, and parts of Texas. The genus includes reseeding annuals, such as lemon bee balm (M. citriodora, also called lemon mint), native to the South and Southwest, and pony bee balm (M. pectinata), which is native to Colorado, Nebraska, Arizona, and Texas.

Most are perennials, however, occupying overlapping swaths of the East, Midwest, and lower eastern Canada. Wild bergamot (M. fistulosa) prefers well-drained soil in a sunny location and tolerates drought. Bee balm (M. didyma), on the other hand, prefers shade and moist soil rich with organic matter. A third species, M. clinopodia (sometimes called basil bee balm), prefers a combination of sun and moist, well-drained soil.

Your herb garden might welcome M. fistulosa or M. didyma. But a third alternative, the hardy hybrid M. x media, settles happily into most gardens. It arose naturally in territories inhabited by M. fistulosa, M. didyma, and M. clinopodia. This varied genetic heritage gives M. x media cultivars great adaptability as well as an abundant variety of tastes and fragrances.

Professional horticulturalists work with M. x media to develop cultivars with specific characteristics. That’s why your garden center probably sells M. x media cultivars in a range of bloom colors, heights, and degrees of disease resistance. Read the plant labels carefully, because the cultivars may require different conditions for best growth. The cultivar ‘Blue Stocking’ makes my summer garden look cooler with its lavender-blue blooms; it combines well with tall yarrow (Achillea spp.) in white and soft yellow.

If you have a small garden or enjoy container gardening, look for M. x media ‘Petite Delight’. This dwarf hybrid grows only 12 to 15 inches tall and confines itself to a tidy mound that does not spread as rapidly as other monardas. Its mid-summer blooms are a cheery lavender-rose and its hardiness unquestionable — ‘Petite Delight’ originated at the Morden Research Station in Manitoba, Canada.

To have a friend, be one

To grow a healthy Monarda patch in your herb garden, select a species or cultivar suitable to your conditions. For instance, my dry herb garden won’t support moisture-loving M. didyma, but M. fistulosa grows well; M. x media ‘Blue Stocking’ thrives. Check the plant label to determine plant spacing; I like to minimize that “new-garden” look by planting closer than recommended.

Prepare the soil at least 10 inches deep, using compost or other well-rotted organic material to establish a light but rich texture, and pop the little plants in place. Mulch around them to prevent weed competition and to even the soil’s moisture content and temperature. Don’t let your first-year Monardas dry out. You may fertilize the Monarda if you wish, but I don’t fertilize mine.

When the first blossoms fade, deadhead the herbs to encourage more blooming. If you keep at it, most Monardas will bloom for six weeks or more. If you enjoy the big, bald seed heads, as I do, let them mature. Sometimes young finches or wrens feed on the Monarda seeds and flee in a feathery explosion when you make your garden rounds. The seeds of perennial Monarda germinate poorly, so you need not worry about unruly sprouts.

Throughout the growing season, use Monarda’s leaves and then the blooms fresh or dried, in the kitchen or for potpourri crafts. Dry Monarda as you would any other herb: quickly, in the shade, and not so much that the herb becomes brown and crunchy.

At first frost, cut Monarda’s tall stalks to the ground. Give the herb a winter mulch — light or substantial, depending on winter’s severity in your area. Let your friend take a well-deserved rest. You’ll meet Monarda again in the spring.


Guest post by Doree N Pitkin, MotherEarthLiving.com

Doree N. Pitkin writes and gardens at her home in Greeley, Colorado. She was editor of both The Big Book of Herbs, (Interweave, 2000) by Arthur O. Tucker and Thomas DeBaggio, and Herbs in Pots, (Interweave, 1999) by Rob Proctor and David Macke.

Tags

  • #keepingBackyardBees
  • bee balm
  • bergamont
  • Doree N Pitkin
  • Herbs in Pots
  • horsemint
  • monarda
  • mother earth living
  • oswego
  • plants for pollinators
  • The Big Book of Herbs

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1 Comment


  • anita erikison says:
    February 12, 2018 at 10:07 pm

    Are there any pamphlets available from you ,to share with members of our garden club. In the month of March, we are having a bee keeper present his knowledge to our group. Any visual help you may have, we’ll certainly share also. Thank you

    Reply


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