Skip to content
Jackson Park WildflowersJackson Park Wildflowers
Jackson Park WildflowersJackson Park Wildflowers
  • Home
  • Discover
    • Get Started
    • Plant Finder
    • Glossary
    • Browse by Genera
    • Other Biota — lower plants and Fungi
    • Other Biota — animals
  • Explore
    • Jackson Park — Scoreboard
  • About
  • Glossary
  • Plant Finder
  • 0
    Cart

    No products in the cart.

    Return to shop

Home / Plant Finder / Verbena
Filter

Showing the single result

Sorting
Filtered (1)
Filter Plants
  • Reset all×
  • Blue×
  • Bilateral×
Filter Plants

1 product found

Show (1)
Cancel
  • Reset all×
  • Blue×
  • Bilateral×
Filtered (1)
Flower spikes about 5" long cover the top of the blue vervain plants; they are densely covered with floral buds and flowers that bloom from the bottom of the spikes sequentially to the top. Below the open flowers are maturing fruits. Individual flowers are tubular, 1/4" long and across, with a grayish green to dark red, hairy calyx sporting five narrow teeth; a tubular, purplish-blue corolla twice the length of the calyx that abruptly flares into five equal, ovate lobes ("petals"); four recessed stamens; and a single, short style. The throat of the flower is "bearded" (occluded by light blue filaments extending to the middle of the opening) which hides the reproductive organs. This is the only vervain with a blue (not deep violet/lavender) color; other species are pink, white, or lavender. The fruit consists of four 2 mm long nutlets held in the remnants of the calyx. Blue vervain might be confused with hoary vervain, but the latter has larger (2x), lavender (not purplish-blue) flowers (with one lobe/petal notched and two larger than the other three), and ovate to egg-shaped (not lance-shaped) leaves that are sessile (not on petioles 1/2" long or longer). Blue vervain is especially common along the margins of the lagoons of Jackson Park.
Quick View

Verbena

Verbena hastata

blue vervain [Blooms: Jul-Sep]

Plant Finder Glossary
Discover
Explore
About

I want to acknowledge the work of a friend and colleague, Dr. Fred Donner. We both share a passion for the flowers in Jackson Park. Fred's website (jacksonparkwildflowers.org) inspired me to build my own website and database; use and enjoy them both.

I am also pleased to thank my ninja web gurus and coders, Lindsey Young and Stefanie Engstrom. This site would not exist without their herculean labors.

Copyright 2026 © Michael LaBarbera

  • Home
  • Discover
    • Get Started
    • Plant Finder
    • Glossary
    • Browse by Genera
    • Other Biota — lower plants and Fungi
    • Other Biota — animals
  • Explore
    • Jackson Park — Scoreboard
  • About
  • Login
  • Newsletter
  • Plant Finder