Salvia pratensis

Salvia pratensis

''Salvia pratensis'' is a species of flowering plant in the family Lamiaceae, native to Europe, western Asia and northern Africa. The specific epithet ''pratensis'' refers to its tendency to grow in meadows. It also grows in scrub edges and woodland borders.
Meadow Sage - Salvia pratensis Habitat: Rural garden Geotagged,Salvia,Salvia pratensis,Spring,United States,meadow sage,sage

Appearance

''Salvia pratensis'' is an herbaceous perennial forming a basal clump 1 to 1.5 m tall, with rich green rugose leaves that are slightly ruffled and toothed on the edges. The stems have four edges and are clad in glandular and soft hairs. The leaves are arranged in opposite pairs, with those on the lower part of the stem up to 15 cm long, decreasing in size higher up the stem. The flower stalks are typically branched, with four to six flowers in each verticil forming a lax spike. The 2.5 cm flowers open from the base of the inflorescence, which grows up to 30.5 cm long. The small calyx is dark brown. The corolla is irregular, 20 to 30 mm long, fused with two lips and long-tubed. The upper lip arches in a crescent shape and the lower lip is three-lobed with the central lobe larger than the lateral lobes. In the wild the corolla is usually bluish-violet. In cultivation, the flowers have a wide variety of colors, from rich violet and violet-blue to bluish white, and from pink to pure white. There are two long stamens protected by the upper corolla lip and the fruit is a four-chambered schizocarp.
Meadow Sage - Salvia pratensis Habitat: Garden Geotagged,Lamiaceae,Salvia,Salvia pratensis,Spring,United States,meadow sage,sage

Distribution

''Salvia pratensis'' is native to Europe, western Asia and northern Africa where it grows in meadows, fields, banks and rough places. It has become naturalized in many parts of the United States, and is considered a noxious weed in the state of Washington. At one time it was banned from California because it was thought to have naturalized in three locations.
Meadow clary Meadow clary - Salvia pratensis Bulgaria,Geotagged,Meadow clary,Meadow sage,Salvia pratensis,nature,plant,wild flower

Habitat

''Salvia pratensis'' is native to Europe, western Asia and northern Africa where it grows in meadows, fields, banks and rough places. It has become naturalized in many parts of the United States, and is considered a noxious weed in the state of Washington. At one time it was banned from California because it was thought to have naturalized in three locations.

References:

Some text fragments are auto parsed from Wikipedia.