Yandina Community Gardens

41 Farrell street, Yandina

  • 41 Farrell St, Yandina
  • Getting Involved
    • Join
    • Volunteer
    • Contact Us
  • My Account
    • Login
    • Lost Password
  • 0 items
  • Workshops & Events
    • YCG Blitz 2026 dates
    • Workshops
    • Events News
  • Learning
    • Fact Sheets For Sale
    • Resources
    • Know Your Plants
    • SEASONAL PLANTING GUIDE
    • Recipes
  • Shop & Nursery
    • Plants For Sale
    • Other Items For Sale (only available in store)
    • Gift Voucher
  • Garden Features
  • Venue Hire
You are here: Home / Archives for tree mugwort

Chinese Mugwort

14/05/2019 By

Artemisia Verlotiorum

Common Name: Tree Mugwort, Verlot’s Mugwort

Plant: All year round

Harvest: All year round

Propagation: Seeds, cuttings or root division

A member of the “Sunflower family” this hardy, evergreen perennial grows to 1-3m height with a clean, fresh antiseptic-like aroma. It needs a sunny, well-drained spot and can survive through severe dry spells, growing successfully in temperate to tropical climates. Occasional pruning keeps the bush lush, thick and in good condition. Chinese Mugwort flowers very late in Summer (early Autumn) and reproduces mainly by stolons (runners).

This culinary herb was originally used to flavour beer (hence the name) or rub leaves over meat before roasting, add chopped leaves to stuffing and it can be added to flavour rice. Diabetics can take advantage of this herb and use small amounts of finely chopped leaves in salads to assist with digestion.

Mugwort can be grown along fences where animals can reach it as required to assist with internal parasites. There have been reports that growing mugwort besides guava or peach trees can help in deterring fruit fly. You can include mugwort leaves in a mixture of aromatic herbs as a pest-deterrent spray, adding a little soap or vegetable oil to help the liquid to stick to the leaves. Dried leaves can be places in sachets and used in cupboards as a moth deterrent.

A great herb to include in a Smudging Stick.

Filed Under: Know Your Plants Tagged With: Chinese mugwort, plants, tree mugwort

Our Location & Hours

41 Farrell street, Yandina, see map
Open to Public Tuesdays and Saturdays 8.30am-12pm. Closed public holidays. (Updated 19 February 2026)

Workshops

  • Sat February 28 2026 - How To Grow Dragon Fruit

    Sat February 28 2026 – How To Grow Dragon Fruit

    Read more
  • Saturday 14 Feb - What is Permaculture?

    Saturday 14 Feb – What is Permaculture?

    Read more

Categories

  • Bees (5)
  • Chickens (1)
  • Competitions (2)
  • Composting (3)
  • e-Book (1)
  • Event (11)
  • Events (11)
  • Fact Sheet (4)
  • Featured (1)
  • Filled Job Positions (1)
  • Food Waste Loop (4)
  • Garden Tours (2)
  • Giving Plastic The Flick (2)
  • Kids Event (1)
  • Know Your Plants (70)
  • Nursery Plants (49)
  • Organisation (13)
  • Other (4)
  • Permaculture Method (7)
  • Recent Events (11)
  • Recent Workshops (51)
  • Recipes (33)
  • Sustainable Living (15)
  • Vacancies (2)
  • Venue Hire (1)
  • Volunteers (5)
  • Workshops (50)
  • YCG History (2)

Tags

biochar chop & drop compost composting Edible Greens edible leaves edible seeds edible tubers Event food waste food waste loop ground cover insect attracting Kids event Kids program know your plants Learning Living sustainably Management Committee medicinal plants medicine member event Morag Gamble native stingless bees Nutrient Dense Food Open garden visit Permaculture Plant plants Recipe Recipes Subtropical Greens Support plants Sustainable Building sustainable living Tropical greens volunteer water plant Wax-wrap making wax-wraps Workshop workshops Worm Farming Yandina Community Garden Yandina community Gardens

Permaculture People

Elizabeth Fekonia - Permaculture Real Food
Anne Gibson - The Micro Gardener
Morag Gamble - Our Permaculture Life
Dee Humphreys - Eatin Garden Edible Garden Tours

Acknowledgement of country

Yandina Community Gardens acknowledges and pays respect to the Traditional Owners of the land, the Gubbi Gubbi (Kabi Kabi) people, past and present and emerging. We recognise and wish to learn from their spiritual and cultural connection to the land.

Copyright © 2026 · Outreach Pro On Genesis Framework · WordPress · Log in