Annual

Lisianthus / Prairie Gentian

Eustoma grandiflorum · Gentianaceae (gentian family)

Also called: Prairie Gentian, Texas Bluebell, Tulip Gentian, Eustoma russellianum

Lisianthus / Prairie Gentian (Eustoma grandiflorum) is a moderate-water annual well suited to Tucson and the low desert. It thrives in full sun to part sun, with a slow to moderate growth rate.

Lisianthus / Prairie Gentian (Eustoma grandiflorum) growing in Tucson
Photo: Wikimedia Commons (CC BY-SA 2.0) · Wikimedia Commons

Lisianthus / Prairie Gentian at a glance

Water use
Moderate (established)
Sun
Full sun to part sun; in Tucson give it morning sun with afternoon shade to carry it through heat. Needs good light for strong stems.
Mature size
12-30 in tall, 8-12 in wide (dwarf to tall cut-flower strains).
Growth rate
Slow to Moderate
Bloom
Purple, blue, pink, white, cream, and bicolors; single and rose-like double forms., Late spring into summer (roughly May-November with care) in the low desert when planted early.
Cold hardiness
Frost-tender; protect from frost below ~32F. Heat-stressed above ~85F, so afternoon shade and early planting are key in 9a-9b. Usually grown as an annual.
Soil
Rich, fertile, well-drained, slightly alkaline to neutral soil amended with organic matter; dislikes soggy or compacted soil.
Native range
Native to the south-central U.S. (Texas/Great Plains) and northern Mexico grasslands; not native to the Sonoran Desert.
Best used as
Premium cut flowers, Color beds and borders, Containers, Bouquets (long vase life)
Wildlife
Rose-like blooms attract bees and butterflies; not a major wildlife magnet.
Toxicity
Considered non-toxic / low risk to pets and children (not on standard toxic-plant lists).

How to grow Lisianthus / Prairie Gentian in Tucson & the low desert

Watering

Plant transplants/plugs early - February through April in the low desert - so plants establish before heat; buy starts rather than seed (very slow/tricky). Keep soil consistently and evenly moist (it dislikes drying out) but well-drained. Important: avoid prolonged cool soil at transplant, which triggers 'rosetting' (failure to bolt and bloom).

Fertilizer & nutrients

Feed regularly with a balanced or bloom-boosting fertilizer every 1-2 weeks; benefits from rich, fertile soil amended with compost.

Pruning & care

Deadhead spent blooms and cut flowers for the vase to encourage a second flush; pinch leggy growth. Tall types may need staking.

Notes

A bit of a specialty crop in Tucson but can succeed: plant nursery transplants EARLY (Feb-April) with afternoon shade so they establish before summer. Prized for its rose-like, long-lasting cut flowers. Buy plugs - seed is difficult even for pros.

Sources: Growing In The Garden - growing lisianthus in hot summers / Arizona low-desert annuals; University of Arizona Cooperative Extension low-desert annual guidance; NC State Extension Eustoma grandiflorum profile

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