indoor rosemary plant near me Rosemary 'Tuscan Blue' AZ | Rosmarinus officinalis
SKU: 43101279615
indoor rosemary plant near me

indoor rosemary plant near me Rosemary 'Tuscan Blue' AZ | Rosmarinus officinalis

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Description

indoor rosemary plant near me Rosemary 'Tuscan Blue' AZ | Rosmarinus officinalisPhoenix's Most Fragrant Edible Herb & Landscape Shrub Rosemary 'Tuscan Blue' Rosemary 'Tuscan Blue' (Salvia rosmarinus 'Tuscan Blue') is one of the Phoenix Valley's most versatile plants a culinary herb, a stunning landscape shrub, and an extraordinarily drought tolerant evergreen that thrives with minimal care in Zone 9b10a. Its bold upright form, intensely fragrant needle like foliage, and vivid blue violet spring blooms make it as attractive as any

Phoenix's Most Fragrant Edible Herb & Landscape Shrub — Rosemary 'Tuscan Blue'

Rosemary 'Tuscan Blue' (Salvia rosmarinus 'Tuscan Blue') is one of the Phoenix Valley's most versatile plants — a culinary herb, a stunning landscape shrub, and an extraordinarily drought-tolerant evergreen that thrives with minimal care in Zone 9b–10a. Its bold upright form, intensely fragrant needle-like foliage, and vivid blue-violet spring blooms make it as attractive as any ornamental shrub. Whether you're creating a fragrant herb garden in Scottsdale, adding evergreen structure to a border in Chandler, or planting a low-water hedge in Mesa, Rosemary 'Tuscan Blue' delivers beauty, fragrance, and function year-round. Available in 1 Gallon, 3/5 Gallon, and 10/15 Gallon sizes.

Rosemary 'Tuscan Blue' Plant Details

Attribute Detail
Scientific Name Salvia rosmarinus 'Tuscan Blue' (formerly Rosmarinus officinalis)
Common Names Rosemary Tuscan Blue, Upright Rosemary, Tuscan Blue Rosemary
Mature Height 4–6 ft
Mature Width 3–5 ft
Growth Rate Moderate — 1–2 ft per year in Phoenix
Sun Full sun (6+ hrs). Handles reflected heat from walls and pavement.
Water Very low once established. One of the most drought-tolerant landscape shrubs available.
USDA Zones 8–11 (Phoenix is Zone 9b–10a)
Soil Well-draining essential. Adapts to Arizona caliche soils with proper drainage amendment.
Foliage Evergreen — intensely fragrant needle-like silver-green leaves year-round
Bloom Color Vivid blue-violet; primary bloom in spring, occasional rebloom in fall
Culinary Use Yes — fully edible; one of the most flavorful culinary rosemary varieties
Wildlife Value Attracts bees and butterflies; deer-resistant

Rosemary 'Tuscan Blue' Uses in Phoenix Landscapes

Informal Privacy Hedge & Evergreen Screen

At 4–6 feet tall and 3–5 feet wide, 'Tuscan Blue' makes a distinctive informal hedge that's both fragrant and beautiful. Its dense, upright form provides solid visual screening when planted 3–4 feet apart, and the aromatic foliage means every breeze carries fragrance into outdoor living areas. Plant along a south- or west-facing fence line for a low-water screen that also functions as a kitchen herb garden — a uniquely Southwestern dual-purpose planting.

Culinary Herb Garden Centerpiece

'Tuscan Blue' is widely considered one of the most flavorful culinary rosemary varieties, with stronger aromatic oils than many other cultivars. It grows large enough to supply a household with rosemary for cooking year-round while remaining a beautiful landscape plant. Pair it with lavender, thyme, and sage in a dedicated herb garden or Mediterranean-inspired planting for a fragrant, edible border that thrives in Phoenix's climate.

Low-Water Border Accent & Foundation Planting

The bold upright form and silver-green needle foliage of 'Tuscan Blue' provide strong structural year-round presence in borders and foundation plantings. It works beautifully as a corner anchor in xeriscape beds, planted alongside Agave, Desert Spoon, and Texas Sage for a polished desert-Mediterranean landscape design. As a specimen plant, space 5 feet from neighbors; in a border planting, 3–4 feet apart.

Pollinator & Butterfly Garden

The vivid blue-violet spring blooms of 'Tuscan Blue' are among the best bee and butterfly forage plants available in the Phoenix Valley. They're particularly valuable as an early-season bloom when few other plants have flowered, providing critical nectar for native bees and monarch butterflies just emerging from winter dormancy. Plant in groups of 3–5 for maximum pollinator impact.

Best Time to Plant Rosemary 'Tuscan Blue' in Phoenix

Fall planting (October–November) is ideal — cool air reduces transplant stress while warm soil encourages fast root development. Rosemary that establishes over fall and winter is prepared for its first Phoenix summer. Spring planting (February–April) is also excellent, particularly if you want to enjoy the first bloom season shortly after planting. Avoid summer planting in June–August; newly planted rosemary needs consistent watering that can be challenging to maintain in peak heat.

How to Plant Rosemary 'Tuscan Blue'

  1. Dig wide, not deep — 2–3x the root ball width, same depth. Rosemary roots establish outward; a wide planting hole improves long-term performance.
  2. Check for caliche and drainage — this is critical for rosemary. Break through any hardpan layer and test drainage by filling the hole with water; it should drain within 30 minutes. Rosemary will not tolerate waterlogged roots.
  3. Backfill with native soil plus grit — mix native soil with 20–30% coarse sand or pea gravel to improve drainage in clay or caliche-heavy sites. Rosemary prefers lean, well-draining soils over rich amended ones.
  4. Spacing — 3–4 ft apart for hedges; 5 ft apart for individual specimens or foundation plantings.
  5. Water basin — build a 3–4 inch ring of soil around the plant to direct irrigation to roots during establishment.
  6. Mulch — 2–3 inches of gravel or decomposed granite (not wood chips). Rock mulch improves drainage around the crown and reflects warmth — conditions rosemary loves.

Watering Rosemary 'Tuscan Blue' in Phoenix

First Year Watering Schedule

  • Weeks 1–2: Every 2–3 days, deep and slow
  • Month 1–2: Every 4–5 days
  • Month 3–6: Every 7–14 days (deep watering, letting soil dry between cycles)
  • After Year 1: Every 2–3 weeks in summer; monthly or less in winter. Rosemary is highly drought-tolerant once established — overwatering is a more common problem than underwatering.

Drip Irrigation

Place drip emitters 18–24 inches from the base. Use 1 GPH emitters and run deeply but infrequently. Rosemary thrives with the "deep and infrequent" approach — soggy soil causes root rot, the plant's primary vulnerability in Phoenix landscapes. Ensure soil dries out between watering cycles.

How big does Rosemary 'Tuscan Blue' get in Phoenix?
In Phoenix's warm climate, 'Tuscan Blue' can reach 4–6 feet tall and 3–5 feet wide at maturity. It grows moderately fast — expect 1–2 feet of new growth per year in good conditions — and can be pruned to any desired size.

Can rosemary survive Phoenix summer heat?
Yes — 'Tuscan Blue' is one of the more heat-tolerant rosemary varieties and handles Zone 9b–10a summers well with deep, infrequent watering. The key is excellent drainage; rosemary that sits in wet soil during summer monsoons can develop root rot.

Does it need pruning?
Light annual pruning after the spring bloom (April–May) keeps 'Tuscan Blue' dense and compact. Never cut into old woody stems — prune only the green growth tips. Heavy shearing into woody growth will damage the plant.

Can I use 'Tuscan Blue' as a culinary rosemary?
Absolutely — it's one of the best culinary rosemary varieties available, with intensely flavored aromatic leaves used in cooking year-round. Just make sure you haven't applied any non-food-safe pesticides or fertilizers if you're harvesting for kitchen use.

How do I keep it from getting leggy?
Prune lightly after spring bloom — cutting soft green stem tips back by one-third keeps the plant bushy and prevents the leggy, open growth that can develop if rosemary is left unpruned for years. Don't skip pruning for more than 1–2 seasons.

You May Also Like

  • Mediterranean Carpet — Low spreading groundcover for sunny Phoenix xeriscape beds
  • Moss Verbena — Fine-textured purple blooming groundcover for desert borders
  • Purple Trailing Lantana — Drought-tolerant purple bloomer for slopes and borders
  • Ground Morning Glory — Silver-foliaged sprawling groundcover for naturalistic Phoenix landscapes

How Many Rosemary 'Tuscan Blue' Do I Need?

For a fragrant informal hedge or kitchen-herb screen, space plants about 4 ft apart (its mature width runs 3 to 5 ft). For specimens and foundation anchors, give each plant 5 ft of clearance so the upright form stands clean.

Hedge / screen run Plants needed (4 ft spacing)
8 ft 2 plants
12 ft 3 plants
20 ft 5 plants
40 ft 10 plants

Rosemary 'Tuscan Blue' Season-by-Season in Phoenix

  • Spring (Feb to Apr): Primary bloom season. Vivid blue-violet flowers cover the plant and feed early native bees and butterflies. Best second window to plant, and the right time for a light tip-prune right after flowering.
  • Summer (May to Sep): Handles full reflected heat from walls and pavement with deep, infrequent water. The biggest risk in summer is soggy soil during monsoon rains, so keep drainage sharp and let the soil dry between cycles. Harvest sprigs anytime for the kitchen.
  • Fall (Oct to Nov): Prime planting season and an occasional light rebloom. Roots establish fast in warm soil ahead of winter.
  • Winter (Dec to Jan): Stays fully evergreen and fragrant. Cold-hardy well below Valley winter lows, so no frost protection is needed in Phoenix.

At a Glance

✔ Heat-Loving (Reflected-Heat Tolerant)   ✔ Drought-Tolerant   ✔ Evergreen   ✔ Pollinator-Friendly   ✔ Edible   ✔ Low-Maintenance   ✔ Deer & Rabbit-Resistant   ✔ Cold-Hardy to 15°F

Plant It With

  • French Lavender: classic Mediterranean herb-garden partner with matching low-water, full-sun needs.
  • Bush Germander: silvery evergreen foliage and blue bloom that echoes rosemary in a xeriscape border.
  • Texas Sage: tough flowering shrub that anchors the back of a low-water bed behind the rosemary.
  • Desert Spoon: architectural native accent that contrasts rosemary's fine needle texture.

Is Rosemary 'Tuscan Blue' Right for Your Yard?

Plant it in full sun with sharp drainage, including hot reflected-heat spots along south- and west-facing walls. It shrugs off Phoenix summers and winters once established and doubles as a kitchen herb. Not a fit if your bed holds water or sits on unamended caliche that stays wet, since soggy roots are the one thing rosemary will not tolerate.

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Size: Large (Pack of 1), Color: Multi, Size: Large (Pack of 1), Color: Multi
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coach
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My doberman and her dog friends love this large high bounce rubber fetch ball! She loves to chew it endlessly between throws and her Rottweiler buddy loves to do the same because it has a hole through it. I definitely recommend the large 3 inch ball for larger dogs.
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Michael Murrell
Port Orchard, US
★★★★★ 4
The orange ones are perfect!
Size: Medium (Pack of 2), Color: Assorted
I wish I could give 4 1/2 stars but it isn't possible. The reason why I don't give 5 stars is because no one sells these in a 2 pack of just orange balls. I was able to find blue only but not orange only. I have a pitbull and so does my good friend. We take our dogs out all the time and they absolutely love chasing these balls.... The orange ones to be exact. They will not play with or bring the blue balls back. They are a waste. I had to buy 2 packs to keep the oranges. I'm taking the blue ones to the local dog park and just dropping them off. Now to the reason these balls deserve 5 stars: They are super easy to throw and they also make a slight whistling noise when you throw them because of the holes. They are real easy to wash due to the material. Also, they are pretty indestructible. The only reason I'm ordering more is due to them being lost. Our dogs have never torn them apart. I'm sure they could if we let them, but we use these for chase, not as chew toys. My friend also tied a rope through one of the balls to throw and retrieve with the rope. He uses this as a fun indoor toy. These do not float in water but I buy other chuckit balls for that purpose. They have the orange balls with the blue stripe which work great in pools. The balls are awesome and I keep coming back for more. Hopefully your dogs like the blue balls.
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Worth the money
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I've had several sizes of Chuck-It ball launchers for years but had resisted buying the balls to go with them because I had about 50 tennis balls already that cost only pennies apiece and these were quite a bit more expensive. But, I got tired of the dogs chewing up the tennis balls. I'd start a ball throwing session with a brand new ball and for the first few throws it would sail through the air and the dogs would have to work to retrieve it. However on the way back, their jaws would work it, chomp-chomp-chomp. And when they returned to me, they'd want to stand there and chomp some more, despite my command to "Drop it!" Within 30 minutes, the brand new ball would have a hole in it and then instead of sailing several football fields through the air, then bouncing over a couple of trees, I'd throw it and it would piddle unenthusiastically to the end of the driveway before falling to the ground with a sulky thud, not even bothering to bounce. So - I finally grew tired of going through a ball every time I play with the dogs - which is everyday - and ordered these chuck-it balls. They are the same size as a tennis ball but made of a rubber-like material (not silicone) and after several months of use, have no wear and tear on them at all. The dogs can exercise their gums on them all the way back to me - throw after throw - and the ball still flies the same distance each time, and bounces satisfyingly upon contact with the ground. The description says "colors may vary" but the first packet I ordered were blue and orange as pictured. Unfortunately my dog lost the orange one the first time we used it. She got thirsty and ran down to our pond for a drink, dropped the ball in the pond and it hasn't been seen since. It is dense enough it doesn't float as a tennis ball might, and by now is probably so covered in mud and slime that I wouldn't recognize it if I tripped over it. Lesson learned: we don't throw the ball in the pond pasture any more. After losing the orange ball, I ordered a second packet of the balls so that I would always have a spare. The second packet is also blue and orange. So while colors may vary, in my experience so far, they haven't (which doesn't matter to me or the dogs).
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