Groundcover · Sonoran native

Goodding's Verbena

Glandularia gooddingii · Verbenaceae

Also called: Desert Verbena, Goodding's Verbena, Southwestern Mock Vervain, Verbena gooddingii

Native

Goodding's Verbena (Glandularia gooddingii) is a low-water groundcover native to the Sonoran Desert region well suited to Tucson and the low desert. It grows to 8-18 in H x 2-3 ft W, with a fast growth rate.

Goodding's Verbena (Glandularia gooddingii) growing in Tucson
Photo: Stan Shebs (CC BY-SA 3.0) · Wikimedia Commons

Goodding's Verbena at a glance

Water use
Low (established)
Sun
Full sun for best flowering and compact form; tolerates reflected heat. Light shade acceptable but reduces bloom.
Mature size
8-18 in H x 2-3 ft W
Growth rate
Fast
Bloom
Lavender to lilac-pink (occasionally pale pink to lavender-blue)., Heaviest in spring (late winter through May), reblooming after rains and through fall; nearly year-round in favorable conditions.
Cold hardiness
Hardy to about 10-15°F (USDA zones 8-11); cold-hardy throughout the Tucson basin and often evergreen in mild winters.
Soil
Needs good drainage; thrives in sandy, gravelly, rocky, and alkaline native desert soils. Tolerates poor, lean ground; dislikes heavy, wet soils.
Native range
Native to the Sonoran and Mojave Deserts of Arizona, southern Nevada, Utah, California, New Mexico, west Texas, and northern Mexico.
Best used as
Groundcover, Wildflower and pollinator gardens, Mass color plantings, Naturalized desert and revegetation areas, Borders and rock gardens
Wildlife
Outstanding butterfly nectar plant; also attracts bees and other native pollinators. A key spring nectar source in desert gardens.
Toxicity
Not known to be toxic; no significant toxicity reported for people or pets.

How to grow Goodding's Verbena in Tucson & the low desert

Watering

Drought-tolerant once established but blooms longest with occasional deep irrigation (roughly every 1-2 weeks in summer heat). Tolerates dry spells; avoid keeping soil constantly wet.

Fertilizer & nutrients

Low needs; little to no fertilizer required in native soils. A light spring feeding can extend bloom but is generally unnecessary.

Pruning & care

Shear back lightly after the main bloom flush to remove spent flowers, refresh the mound, and stimulate rebloom. A harder cutback in late summer rejuvenates leggy, tired plants. Often short-lived (2-3 years) but reseeds.

Notes

A native, fast-growing, mounding-to-spreading perennial groundcover covered with showy lavender flower clusters, especially in spring. One of the best native verbenas for Tucson color and pollinators. Often behaves as a short-lived perennial that reseeds itself; shearing prolongs vigor and bloom. Reclassified from Verbena gooddingii to Glandularia gooddingii.

Sources: University of Arizona Cooperative Extension; Arizona-Sonora Desert Museum; AMWUA 'Landscape Plants for the Arizona Desert'; Tohono Chul / Tucson Botanical Gardens

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