Asclepias incarnata 'Soulmate'
Tried and True Recommended by 2 Professionals
Species Native to Missouri
Common Name: swamp milkweed
Type: Herbaceous perennial
Family: Apocynaceae
Zone: 3 to 8
Height: 3 to 3.5 feet
Spread: 1.5 to 2 feet
Bloom Time: July to August
Bloom Color: Pink
Bloom Description: Rose pink
Sun: Full sun
Water: Medium to wet
Maintenance: Low
Flowers: Showy Flowers, Fragrant Flowers
Wildlife: Attracts Butterflies
Tolerates: Clay Soil, Wet Soil, Deer
Uses: Rain Garden, Will Naturalize

Culture

Easily grown in medium to wet soils in full sun. Surprisingly tolerant of average well-drained soils in cultivation even though the species is native to swamps and wet meadows. Plants have deep taproots and are best left undisturbed once established. Foliage is slow to emerge in spring. ‘Soulmate’ is available from seed and may self-seed in the garden.

Noteworthy Characteristics

‘Soulmate’ is a swamp milkweed cultivar that typically grows 3-3.5’ tall on branching stems. It is an erect, clump-forming plant that is basically a deep rose pink form of the pink/mauve-flowered Missouri native species. Small, mildly fragrant, deep rose pink flowers (1/4” wide), each with five reflexed petals and an elevated central crown, appear in tight clusters (umbels) at the stem ends in summer. Narrow, lance-shaped leaves are 3-6” long. Stems exude a toxic milky sap when cut. Flowers are followed by attractive slender seed pods (to 4” long) which split open when ripe releasing silky-haired seeds easily carried by the wind. Flowers are very attractive to butterflies as a nectar source. In addition, this plant serves as a food source for the larval stage of Monarch butterflies.

Problems

No serious insect or disease problems.

Garden Uses

Sunny borders, stream/pond banks, butterfly gardens. A good plant for low spots or other moist areas in the landscape.