Annual

Dusty Miller

Jacobaea maritima · Asteraceae

Also called: Silver Ragwort, Senecio cineraria (former name), Silver Dust

Dusty Miller (Jacobaea maritima) is a low-water annual well suited to Tucson and the low desert. It grows to 8-18 in tall and 12 in wide in full sun to part shade, with a slow to moderate growth rate.

Dusty Miller (Jacobaea maritima) growing in Tucson
Photo: Denis Barthel (talk) (CC BY-SA 3.0) · Wikimedia Commons

Dusty Miller at a glance

Water use
Low (established)
Sun
Full sun to part shade; silvery foliage holds color best in full sun. In Tucson, tolerates afternoon shade in peak summer.
Mature size
8-18 in tall and 12 in wide
Growth rate
Slow to moderate
Bloom
Insignificant mustard-yellow flowers (grown for silver-white felted foliage), Grown for foliage, not flowers; small yellow flowers appear in late spring/summer and are usually removed
Cold hardiness
Frost-hardy to roughly 15-20 F; in Tucson 9a-9b it survives winters and is used as a cool-season bedding plant, often persisting as a short-lived perennial before declining in summer heat.
Soil
Needs well-drained soil; tolerates poor, sandy, alkaline Tucson soils. Sharp drainage is essential to prevent root and crown rot.
Native range
Mediterranean region (coastal southern Europe)
Best used as
Silver foliage contrast/edging, Cool-season bedding, Container 'filler/spiller', Borders and mixed plantings
Wildlife
Low wildlife value; deer- and rabbit-resistant due to fuzzy, bitter foliage. Minor pollinator interest if allowed to flower.
Toxicity
Toxic if ingested—contains hepatotoxic pyrrolizidine alkaloids that can cause liver damage in pets, livestock, and humans. Mildly toxic to cats and dogs (vomiting, diarrhea); keep away from pets, children, and grazing animals. Sap may irritate skin.

How to grow Dusty Miller in Tucson & the low desert

Watering

Grown primarily as a cool-season annual in Tucson: plant in fall (October-November) for winter and spring foliage display. Water moderately to establish, then sparingly—it is drought-tolerant and prone to rot in wet, poorly drained soil. Water weekly in winter, more in spring warm-up.

Fertilizer & nutrients

Very light feeder; needs little fertilizer. A single light application of balanced slow-release feed at planting is ample. Over-fertilizing reduces the prized silvery leaf color.

Pruning & care

Pinch tips to keep compact and bushy; remove any yellow flower buds (insignificant) to keep the plant focused on foliage. Shear leggy plants to rejuvenate.

Notes

Best used in Tucson as a fall-through-spring foliage accent; it struggles and often dies out in the intense summer heat, so treat as a cool-season annual. Its silver leaves pair well with cool-season flowers like petunias, snapdragons, and pansies. Prized for color and texture rather than bloom.

Sources: University of Arizona Cooperative Extension; Pima County Master Gardeners; Merck Veterinary Manual (toxicity); Missouri Botanical Garden

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