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10 Annual Plants for Hot, Dry Climates

Finding plants that will thrive all summer long in hot, dry climates can be challenging. These plants are great options to consider for your containers and landscape.

Contributors: Kerry Meyer

Senorita Blanca® and  Senorita Rosalita® Cleome

Common Name: Spider Flower

This trio of plants is tall, well-branched and easy to grow. They are a great way to add temporary height to your garden. The plants are easy to grow and have almost no pest or disease issues. They thrive in heat and shrug off tough conditions.

24-48” tall, Pequena Rosalita 18-36”. Part Sun to Sun. Annual.

Uses: large upright containers, pollinator gardens, cut flower gardens, mass plantings in landscapes


 

Vermillionaire® Cuphea  

Common Name: Large Firecracker Plant

Do you love hummingbirds? If so, firecracker plant should be a staple in your garden. It attracts hummingbirds like crazy, is easy to grow and flowers like mad even when the heat is on. This is a fairly large, bushy plant that’s perfect for filling space in the middle of the border.

Uses: large upright containers, pollinator gardens, mass plantings in landscapes

18-28” tall. Sun. Perennial in zones 8-11, grown as an annual elsewhere.


Diamond Frost®, Diamond Mountain® and Diamond Snow® Euphorbia

Common Name: Euphorbia

Back in 2005 when we introduced Diamond Frost euphorbia, little did we know that we had introduced a plant that would become a staple for gardens and combination containers everywhere. This plant thrives in any climate and couldn’t care less if it’s hot or not, humid or arid, sunny or shady. Though it looks frilly and delicate, it is tough as nails.

Since then, we’ve introduced two more euphorbias that are just as easy to grow but have different forms. Diamond Snow is a more densely mounded plant with double flowers. It’s beautiful as an edging along sunny pathways and doesn’t mind the reflected heat there. Diamond Mountain is an extra-large euphorbia that’s made to mix with other very vigorous plants like Supertunia Vista® Bubblegum in containers and is large enough to take the place of a small shrub in the landscape.

Uses: upright containers, mass plantings in landscapes, perfect mixer in combinations

12-18” tall except Diamond Mountain - 24-36” tall. Part Sun to Sun. Annual.


Blue My Mind® Evolvulus

Common Name:  Dwarf Morning Glory

Some of the best-known sky blue flowered plants, Delphinium and Lobelia, are not lovers of hot climates. BUT those of us in hot climates no longer need to envy our northern neighbors. Blue My Mind thrives in heat and blooms best in hot conditions. So, rather than wilting when it gets hot, it blooms even better!

Uses: upright containers, annual groundcover, spiller in combinations

6-12” tall. Sun. Perennial in zones 9-11, grown as an annual elsewhere.


Truffula® Pink Gomphrena

Common Name: Globe Amaranth

This is such a fun plant! It is loaded with small, fluffy pink flowers with yellow-orange stamens and blooms like crazy in the heat. The blooms attract pollinating bees and butterflies which add color and movement to your garden. This is a fairly large plant that shines best in landscapes, but you could also use it as a thriller in large container recipes.

Uses: landscapes, upright containers, hanging baskets, filler or thriller in combinations, pollinator gardens

22-28” tall. Sun. Perennial in zones 9-11, grown as an annual elsewhere.


Luscious® Lantana – Available in 10 Colors

Common Name: Lantana

Lantana is an amazingly tough plant for hot, dry climates, but it is loved by gardeners everywhere for its season-long, colorful blooms. Dare we say it’s nearly indestructible as long as it’s not too cold or too shady. Lantana adores heat and will flower through pretty much anything the summer can throw at it—heat, humidity, drought, summer thunderstorms, you name it. If you live in zone 9 or warmer, lantana will be hardy for you and grow to be a small shrub. For the rest of the country, it’s a wonderful annual. They are great pollinator plants, attractive to birds, bees and butterflies.

Uses: large upright containers, pollinator gardens, cut flower gardens, mass plantings in landscapes

Height varies, up to 36”. Sun. Perennial in zones 9-11, grown as an annual elsewhere.


 

Intensia® Blueberry, Intensia® Red Hot and Intensia® White Phlox

Common Name: Phlox

For warm climate gardeners, Intensia phlox are a gardener’s best friend. But there’s a catch: this is a plant you’ll need to buy later in spring. That’s because they need warmth and sun to grow well. They may start out small, but you’ll be amazed how they grow once you get them out into the garden. They will take off and add color all summer long with butterflies coming by to hang out, too.

Uses: landscapes, combination planters, patriotic combinations

10-16” tall. Sun. Annual.


 

Mojave® Portulaca - Available in 5 colors

Common Name: Purslane

Here’s another annual that doesn’t just tolerate heat, it needs heat to grow and bloom well. The hotter it gets, the more flowers you’ll see. Something unique about it is that its flowers close up at night, so you can watch them “wake up” in the morning as you enjoy them with your morning coffee. Purslane is a low growing plant that will spill nicely out of containers or act as a flowering annual groundcover in the landscape. Butterflies are attracted to their hot colored blooms that come in shades of red, orange, fuchsia, yellow and pink.

Uses: spiller in combinations, pollinator gardens, annual groundcover in landscapes

4-8” tall. Sun. Annual.


Lemon Coral® Sedum

Common Name:  Sedum

Chartreuse is one of the most versatile colors to use in the garden. It mixes beautifully with almost every other color and brings a pop of vibrancy to containers and landscapes. Lemon Coral sedum forms a bright chartreuse green carpet of soft, touchable, needlelike foliage. It works great as a small scale groundcover and is wonderful in container recipes. Plant it a shallow bowl and add a few citronella candles to make a fun patio table centerpiece. Like all sedum, this plant loves heat and will handle low humidity with ease.

Uses: spiller in combinations, annual groundcover in landscapes, on its own in containers

3-10” tall. Part Sun to Sun. Perennial in zones 7-11, grown as an annual elsewhere.


Whirlwind® Blue, Whirlwind® Pink and Whirlwind® White Scaevola

Common Name: Fan Flower

This Australian native is as tough as they come. Fan flower has been grown for about 25 years in North America, but for a long time, the varieties available bloomed sparsely and had long, awkward branches. Our modern, refined Whirlwind fan flowers are packed with color and have a beautiful shape. They love heat, don’t mind low humidity or moderate drought, and don’t need much plant food to thrive. Bees will thank you for planting them.

Uses: upright containers, pollinator gardens, mass plantings in landscapes

8-14” tall. Sun. Annual

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