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Thymus citriodorus Doone Valley - Lemon Thyme

Thymus x citriodorus Doone Valley
Lemon Thyme

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Not as beautiful as in the pictures and didn't last long at my place (next to the other thymes).

Sylvain, 10/09/2024

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More information

This perennial thyme with a dense and spreading habit bears small round leaves speckled with small golden spots on a dark green background, endowed with a lemony aroma. Its flowering, pink and honey-producing, occurs in late spring or early summer depending on the climate. Used as a herb, it is also a perfect groundcover plant for slightly arid rockeries, borders, and dry gardens.
Flower size
1 cm
Height at maturity
15 cm
Spread at maturity
40 cm
Exposure
Sun
Hardiness
Hardy down to -15°C
Soil moisture
Dry soil
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Best planting time March, September
Recommended planting time February to April, September to October
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Flowering time May to July
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Description

Thymus x citriodorus 'Doone Valley' is a hybrid variety of lemon thyme with a dense and spreading habit, adapted to dry and poor soils, which is particularly attractive with its variegated evergreen foliage, as if illuminated by small golden spots. It emits a pleasant lemon aroma and is used in cooking like lemon thyme with fish, desserts, and to flavour infusions. Adorned with pink flowers in early summer, beneficial for bees, it is also a very pretty plant for rockeries or sunny borders. Essential in dry and rocky gardens, where the soil lacks depth and does not retain moisture.

The hybrid thyme 'Doone Valley' is a horticultural creation derived from Thymus x citriodorus. The latter has a controversial origin, with some botanists considering it as a hybrid of Thymus vulgaris (the thyme of our Mediterranean scrublands), while others consider it a separate species called Thymus serpyllum var. citriodorus. Whatever the case, 'Doone Valley', like its ancestors, is a medicinal and aromatic plant from the family Lamiaceae (or Labiatae) native to southern Europe and North Africa.

This Doone Valley variety has a creeping, prostrate, and branching habit, forming a carpet 10 to 15 cm (4 to 6in) tall and 40 cm (16in) wide. Its small, round and glossy foliage is randomly speckled with golden yellow. It covers flexible, woody-based, rooting stems, so the plant spreads slowly. The golden variegation is more pronounced in summer. Numerous essential oil glands are visible under a magnifying glass on the leaves. Flowering occurs from late May to July depending on the climate. Very small tubular and bilabiate flowers in pink bloom in cymes on the current year's shoots, attracting many pollinating insects. Like many Mediterranean plants adapted to drought, thymes develop a dual root system, consisting of a central taproot that penetrates deeply into the soil or into rock crevices, and a superficial network of very long rootlets capable of capturing the slightest surface moisture. The foliage persists in winter.

Thymus Doone Valley is decorative all year round and is very hardy when planted in perfectly drained or even arid soil. The elegant and bright colour of its foliage sets it apart from other culinary plants. Associate it with lavenders, cistus, shrubby salvias, dwarf wormwoods, cotton lavenders, or rosemary. It will thrive in a very sunny rockery, with gold or silver baskets, teucriums, and creeping ceanothus, for example. It is also used as a herb; its rustic-scented leaves are highly appreciated in cooking. Used alone or in a bouquet garni, combined with laurel, parsley, and rosemary, thyme leaves add flavour to stews, sauces and marinades.  They are also used in infusions, renowned for relieving digestive ailments. A sun-loving plant, thyme can also be planted in dry borders or in pots, allowing it to be close at hand near the kitchen…

Thymus citriodorus Doone Valley - Lemon Thyme in pictures

Thymus citriodorus Doone Valley - Lemon Thyme (Foliage) Foliage

Flowering

Flower colour pink
Flowering time May to July
Inflorescence Cyme
Flower size 1 cm
Fragrance slightly scented
Bee-friendly Attracts pollinators

Foliage

Foliage persistence Evergreen
Foliage colour variegated with yellow
Aromatic? Fragrant foliage when creased
Foliage description Fragrance evoking lemon

Plant habit

Height at maturity 15 cm
Spread at maturity 40 cm
Growth rate normal

Botanical data

Genus

Thymus

Species

x citriodorus

Cultivar

Doone Valley

Family

Lamiaceae

Other common names

Lemon Thyme

Origin

Cultivar or hybrid

Product reference173972

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Planting and care

The Doone Valley lemon thyme requires a perfectly drained, rocky or sandy, poor soil, even limestone and rocky, in order to withstand the rigors of winter. Plant it after the last frost or in September-October in hot and dry climates. It cannot thrive without sunlight and likes to have warm roots. When planted in overly rich soil, it becomes weak and lacks compactness. In poor and well-drained soil, it is hardy down to -12/-15 °C and will live longer. Plant it in a raised bed, enriched with gravel, in a rockery, in full sun, against a south-facing wall, or on a rocky or sandy slope.  Any substrate that does not retain moisture that would be fatal to it in winter, but also in summer, which is its vegetative rest period. The combination of heat and humidity favours the development of a fungus that attacks the plant's collar and will cause its death as much as the cold. It is preferable to prune the stems after flowering to maintain a compact habit.

Like many Mediterranean plants adapted to drought, thyme plants from arid environments develop a dual root system, consisting of a central taproot, which sinks deeply into the ground or between rock crevices to draw water, and a superficial network of very long rootlets capable of extracting the slightest surface moisture. For this reason, these plants do not tolerate transplantation following uprooting. Regularly pruning them (on young wood), and after flowering, allows them to age better and remain compact.

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Planting period

Best planting time March, September
Recommended planting time February to April, September to October

Intended location

Suitable for Rockery
Type of use Edge of border, Container, Slope
Hardiness Hardy down to -15°C (USDA zone 7b) Show map
Ease of cultivation Amateur
Exposure Sun
Soil pH Neutral, Calcareous
Soil type Chalky (poor, alkaline and well-drained), Stony (poor and well-drained)
Soil moisture Dry soil, Well-drained, stony

Care

Pruning instructions Trim the ends of the flowering shoots to give the plant a more compact and branching habit. Regular pruning throughout the year also helps to give a pleasing shape to this shrub.
Pruning Pruning recommended once a year
Pruning time July to September
Disease resistance Good
Overwinter Can be left in the ground
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