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Cold hardiness & minimum temperature

Is Half-Stained Sage (Salvia semiatrata)cold hardy? Hardiness zone & min temp

Also called Half-Stained Sage, Pine Mountain Sage.

More about half-stained sage

About Half-Stained Sage

Salvia semiatrata · also called Half-Stained Sage, Pine Mountain Sage · flowering

Salvia semiatrata is an evergreen woody sub-shrub native to the pine forest edges and rocky slopes of Chiapas, southern Mexico. It produces a profusion of small but richly coloured violet and deep purple flowers surrounded by decorative pink bracts from summer through autumn, making it one of the most ornamental of the Mexican sages and highly attractive to hummingbirds and bees. The most important care fact is that it demands very sharply drained soil and full sun — it is challenging to cultivate outside its native montane habitat and resents root disturbance. Not individually assessed by the ASPCA; treated as mildly-toxic as a precaution.

Cold limit: USDA 8–11 · RHS H3 (2–35°C)

What half-stained sage's hardiness rating actually means

Half-Stained Sage is half-hardy (RHS H3). It survives a mild winter outdoors in a sheltered spot, but a hard frost kills it — so in colder zones it is lifted, potted, or grown as a tender plant. Its RHS rating of H3 means: Half-hardy — comes through mild UK winters outside but is killed by a hard freeze. On the US scale that maps to USDA 8–11 — the zones where it can be left outdoors year-round.

New to these scales? The USDA hardiness zone map explained covers how the zone numbers work, and you can find your own zone with the zone finder.

Minimum temperature — and what happens below it

Minimum survivable temperature is roughly about −5 to 1 °C — a light, short frost only. Half-Stained Sage shrugs off cold nights but a real, sustained freeze will kill it.

Concretely, for half-stained sage as it gets too cold:

Can half-stained sage go outside or overwinter — and where?

Work back from your local frost dates with the frost-date calculator: the last spring frost and first autumn frost are what really decide when half-stained sage can be outside. US growers can check USDA zones; UK growers should use the RHS hardiness ratings, which match the H3 figure above.

Frost protection for borderline half-stained sage

Half-Stained Sage is right on a hardiness edge in many gardens, so if you are pushing it, these measures buy it the margin it needs:

Half-Stained Sage hardiness — frequently asked questions

Is half-stained sage cold hardy?

Half-Stained Sage is half-hardy (RHS H3). It survives a mild winter outdoors in a sheltered spot, but a hard frost kills it — so in colder zones it is lifted, potted, or grown as a tender plant. Borderline outdoors. In its mild end of USDA 8–11 (and sheltered UK gardens) half-stained sage can stay out; in colder areas it must be lifted, brought in, or treated as a frost-tender plant.

What is the minimum temperature half-stained sage can survive?

Minimum survivable temperature is roughly about −5 to 1 °C — a light, short frost only. Half-Stained Sage shrugs off cold nights but a real, sustained freeze will kill it.

What hardiness zone is half-stained sage?

Half-Stained Sage is rated USDA 8–11 and RHS H3 — Half-hardy — comes through mild UK winters outside but is killed by a hard freeze.

Can half-stained sage survive winter outside?

It can live outside year-round only in the mildest, most sheltered part of USDA 8–11 or a frost-free UK microclimate. In colder zones, grow it in a pot you can move under cover, or lift its tubers/roots and store them frost-free over winter. A south-facing wall, free-draining soil and a dry winter position can push it a full zone hardier than the books suggest.

How do I protect half-stained sage from frost?

Mulch the crown or root zone deeply with bark, straw or leaf-mould before the first hard frost. Move container plants against a warm wall or into an unheated but frost-free porch or greenhouse. Fleece the top growth on the coldest nights, and keep it on the dry side — dry roots survive cold far better than wet ones. Lift dahlia-type tubers or tender crowns after the first light frost blackens the foliage and store them somewhere cool but frost-free.

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