Scaredy cat plant is usually planted by seed or from a potted nursery start in the spring after all danger of frost has passed and soil temps are at 60 degrees Fahrenheit or above. It is a fast-growing plant that generally flowers within a few weeks when planted from a nursery start. Scaredy cat plant is stocked by large local garden centers, or you can order live plants or seeds from online retailers. For the earliest bloom with seeds, it’s best to start them indoors, six to eight weeks before the last frost. Scaredy cat plant has no notable pest or disease issues.

Light

This plant prefers full sun but will tolerate partial sun so long as it gets some hot afternoon sun. Too much shade will make plants leggy and reduce flowering.

Soil

Scaredy cat prefers a dry situation, so plant it in a sunny spot in soil that has good drainage—sandy soils are fine for this plant. If growing in a container, make sure the drainage is adequate, and use a mixture of traditional potting soil, peat moss, and sand or perlite to ensure the plant’s roots don’t get waterlogged.

Water

This drought-tolerant plant doesn’t need supplemental watering except when summer temperatures rise. Water as you would succulent plants, such as sedums. If there is an unusual prolonged drought situation, a one-inch soaking every two or three weeks is usually enough.

Temperature and Humidity

This plant is reliably hardy in zones 10 and 11 and in zones eight and nine it may survive winters if you mulch around the base of the plant. It has no preference for humidity, but like most mints, it thrives in relatively arid conditions.

Fertilizer

These plants will thrive with a monthly application of a diluted balanced fertilizer during the growing season. In regions where it grows as a perennial, feeding should be withheld in the winter months.

Pruning

To make the plant grow in a fuller, bushier form, pinch back the leaves early in the season, as you would a dahlia or chrysanthemum. Deadheading spent flowers will help stimulate more blossoms and extend the overall bloom period. Deadheading also prevents the plant from self-seeding in the garden, which can be a problem in warmer regions where the plant is perennial.

Propagating Scaredy Cat Plant

Like other members of the mint family, these plants are among the easiest to propagate by rooting stem cuttings. You can do it at any time during the growing season. Here’s how: In regions where scaredy cat plant is grown as an annual, taking cuttings in the early fall and rooting them indoors is a common way to keep the plants going from year to year. These plants are so easy to propagate that it’s possible to simply plant sliced leaf portions in soil and wait for them to root themselves. These plants sometimes take root at the point where trailing branches touch the soil, and these self-layered rooted branches can be severed from the mother plant, dug up, and transplanted to new garden locations or into pots to overwinter indoors.

How to Grow Scaredy Cat Plant From Seed

Because it is a pure species, Coleus caninus will “come true” if you plant seeds collected from the dried flower heads. Collect the flower heads in the fall, store them in a paper bag until they are fully dry, then crush and rub the petals to extract the seeds. The seeds can be saved over winter, then sown indoors in seed flats filled with a seed starter mix, six to eight weeks before the last frost. Keep the starter mix moist and warm, in a location with bright indirect light until they germinate and sprout. Once they develop two or more sets of true leaves, the seedlings can be transplanted into individual pots or planted in the garden once all danger of frost has passed. Because these plants are so easy to propagate from stem or leaf cuttings, sowing seeds is not a common form of propagation.

Potting and Repotting Scaredy Cat Plant

Scaredy cat plant will readily grow in any well-draining pot filled with a porous potting mix, such as a mixture of standard potting soil and perlite or sand. Growing in containers allows you to move the plant around to experiment with its possible animal-repellant qualities. However, this is not a plant that makes a good permanent indoor houseplant due to its unpleasant odor. Repotting is usually not necessary, as plants are generally discarded after the growing season, and planted afresh each spring as annuals. Should you want to grow it year-round as an outdoor patio plant, prune back the stems and reduce watering in fall. In this case, repotting should be done every two or three years.

Overwintering

In regions where scaredy cat plant is reliably hardy, no special treatment is required for the winter, except to reduce fertilization. In borderline climates, scaredy cat plants sometimes survive winters if covered with mulch for the winter. Otherwise, simply pull the plants from the ground and discard them in the fall after they die back. If you’re overwintering a potted scaredy cat plant indoors, place it near a sunny eastern or southern facing window, and avoid drafty spots. And you’ll want to place it in a location where its unpleasant aroma won’t be a problem.

How to Get Scaredy Cat Plant to Bloom

This plant blooms readily from late spring through the middle of the summer. Conditions that might encourage more blooming include:

Better sun exposure. Without at least six hours of direct sun, these plants will bloom less robustly.More fertilizer. These plants prefer monthly feeding with a diluted balanced fertilizer and may bloom less robustly if they don’t get enough nutrients.

Common Problems With Scaredy Cat Plant

There are very few problems with scaredy cat plant. If they are planted in shady conditions, it’s common for the stems to become leggy and somewhat sparse. Cutting back the stems regularly can help keep the plant full and bushy.