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This Walker's Low catmint from Nature Hill's can be grown in zones 4-9 and is adaptable to various soil types. Differences in growing catmint vs catnip ...
Catmint Vs. Catnip Catmint is often confused with catnip (Nepeta cataria), which is a related plant. Catnip also is aromatic but it’s far less ornamental and more weedy in appearance than catmint.
Answer: Calamint, catmint, and catnip are all in the mint family, but calamint is in the genus Calamintha and catmint and catnip are in the genus Nepeta. It can be confusing because calamint’s ...
Like catnip, catmint sports fuzzy, toothed leaves, but they're usually bigger. It tends to grow in contained clumps rather than developing a weedy appearance and taking over your garden.
At the same time, catmint has proven to be an effective deterrent for plant-damaging insects, as well as deer and other animals. About the only downside is that catmint, like its relative catnip ...
Most of us have heard of catnip, and cat lovers might even gift their beloved pets with a bit of this intoxicating treat now and then, but not many of us actually grow this plant in our gardens. I ...
Catnip, or Nepeta cataria, and the other catmints contain nepetalactone, a mild hallucinogen that causes brief, mild euphoria. Cats roll, rub, vocalize and sometimes become aggressive.
Most of us have heard of catnip, and cat lovers might even gift their beloved pets with a bit of this intoxicating treat now and then, but not many of us actually grow this plant in our gardens. I ...