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Question:My Tuscan rosemary is in trouble. It appears to be dying. Answer: Tuscan is a nice upright rosemary variety with good color and density that is grown for cooking and its oil content.
Tuscan Blue rosemary can be seen at Franklin Park Conservatory and Botanical Gardens. The plantcan be grown as an annual in central Ohio.
We asked a garden expert how to grow and care for rosemary that stays lush and fragrant all summer.
‘Tuscan Blue’ is taller with similar flowers. A mound-shaped rosemary with blue, nearly violet flowers could be ‘Collingwood Ingram’ or ‘Ken Taylor’ varieties.
I have spent the past two years trying to establish a modest but charming hedge of rosemary, not the waist-high, architectural walls of clipped rosemary that I once saw in the south of France, but ...
This rosemary is perfect for shearing into formal topiaries and hedges (or bonsai style). Common cultivars are Tuscan Blue and shorter Benenden Blue.
Many gardeners in these parts have a fig tree. Or they used to. Big old figs, which we have come to view as a reliable feature of the Washington garden, took it on the chin this winter. This ...
Seventh-graders, from left, Shaila Menta, Natasha Sachs, ChloeArnold, Austin Shadel, Madeleine Skipworth, and Craig Kimball, worktogether to plant Tuscan blue rosemary Friday at Alta Vista ...
My least favourite rosemary is the more upright 'Tuscan Blue', as this can develop dead patches in it for no apparent reason, so can't be relied upon for a hedge. Can potting mix go off?
The Garden Docs answer questions on rosemary plants, milkweed and more. Nadine asks: “I have a tall ‘Tuscan Blue' rosemary plant; can I use it for cooking?” Yes. All of the rosemary herbs ...
Tuscan blue rosemary (Rosemarinus officinalis "Tuscan Blue") is an upright shrub that quickly makes a six-foot informal hedge.
Rosemary is evergreen so stays looking good the year round, it has lovely flowers of blues ranging from almost mauve to rich ultramarine, it smells heavenly, and it’s an essential kitchen herb.