Datura metel
   
Tried and True Recommended by 3 Professionals
Common Name: horn-of-plenty
Type: Herbaceous perennial
Family: Solanaceae
Zone: 9 to 10
Native Range: Southwestern China
Garden Location: Kemper Center for Home Gardening Building
Height: 3 to 4 feet
Spread: 3 to 4 feet
Bloom Time: July to To frost
Bloom Color: Purple, White, Yellow
Bloom Description: White, yellow, lilac and purple
Sun: Full sun
Water: Medium
Maintenance: Low
Flowers: Showy Flowers, Fragrant Flowers
Leaves: Fragrant
Tolerates: Drought
Uses: Suitable as Annual

Culture

Winter hardy to USDA Zone 9-10. In St. Louis it is grown as an annual. In the ground, plants do best in rich, humusy, well-drained loams in full sun with regular moisture. Purchase plants from nurseries in spring or start seeds indoors about 6-8 weeks before last spring frost. Set plants out after last frost date. Plants tend to sprawl, and are best spaced about 3’ apart unless staking or other support will be used. Deadheading flowers is not necessary. Harvest ripe seed for planting in the following spring. Self-seeding may occur in the St. Louis area even though plants are not winter hardy. Container plants may be cut back and overwintered indoors in a sunny window.

Noteworthy Characteristics

Native to southern China, horn of plenty (devil’s trumpet or angel’s trumpet or thornapple) is a shrubby, sprawling, short-lived, tender perennial that is grown in St. Louis as an annual. It grows 3-4’ tall and spreads to as much as 4’ wide. Ovate, wavy-toothed, dark green leaves (to 8” long). Foliage emits a disagreeable odor when bruised or crushed. Single or double, upward-facing trumpets (to 7” long and 4” wide at the mouth) have a sweetly overpowering fragrance. Flowers come in a variety of colors, including white, yellow, lilac and dark purple. Each flowers lasts only one night. From an unusual cigar-shaped flower bud, each flower will unravel in the evening to reveal a fragrant trumpet-shaped bloom that only lasts until noon the following day. Flowers will typically bloom intermittently from mid-summer to frost. Flowers are followed by thorny, spherical fruit. Plants belong to the nightshade family and all parts are extremely toxic. Datura is similar to Brugmansia, except the trumpets of the latter are larger, last for several days and droop downward. Nomenclature for plants in the genus Datura is confusing.

Problems

No serious insect or disease problems. Watch for whiteflies, mealy bugs and spider mites.

Garden Uses

Borders, containers. Specimen or group. Place containers near patios so flower fragrance may be enjoyed.

Similar Plants


Datura inoxia