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Achillea x 'Moonshine'
Moonshine Yarrow

| Plant Height: |
18" |
| Flowering Height: |
24" |
| Spread: |
18" |
| Type: |
Perennial |
| Habit: |
Spreading, mat-forming |
| Bloom Color: |
Canary yellow |
| Bloom Time: |
Late June thru Early August |
| Light Requirements: |
Prefers full sun; will tolerate mild shade |
| Soil Requirements: |
Well drained loam soil; may suffer in heavy clay |
Additional
Plant Information:
Provided by Missouri Botanical Gardens Kemper Center
Best grown in lean, dry to medium moisture, well-drained
sandy loams in full sun. Does well in average garden soils and tolerates poor
soils as long as drainage is good. Avoid heavy clays and moist, rich, fertile
soils. Plants are best sited in locations protected from strong winds. May need
staking or other support. Deadhead spent flower heads to lateral buds to promote
additional bloom. Cut plants back to basal leaves after flowering to tidy the
planting and to encourage new foliage growth with a possible additional fall
bloom. 'Moonshine' is susceptible to a number of foliar diseases and tends to
melt out by mid to late summer in hot and humid southern climates including St.
Louis. Divide clumps as needed (every 2-3 years) to reinvigorate plantings.
'Moonshine' is an upright, clump-forming, compact hybrid
yarrow which is noted for its deeply-dissected, fern-like, aromatic, silvery to
gray-green foliage and its tiny, long-lasting, bright lemon-yellow flowers which
appear in dense, flattened, compound corymbs (to 2-3" across) throughout the
summer on stiff, erect stems typically rising 1-2' tall. This plant resembles A.
'Coronation Gold' except it is much smaller and the flowers are a lighter
yellow.
Botrytis, stem rot, root rot, powdery mildew and rust can be significant disease
problems. Plant foliage tends to decline considerably by mid summer in hot and
humid summer climates. May not need staking if given proper culture, though
strong summer rain storms with high winds can flatten exposed plantings.
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