The Garden Guy: Plant lovers Totally Stoked for bodacious blue and white asters

An Eastern Tiger Swallowtail feeds on the Totally Stoked Riptide, a new Stokes aster making its debut in 2025. Nearby is Truffula Pink gomphrena, also a butterfly champ.
An Eastern Tiger Swallowtail feeds on the Totally Stoked Riptide, a new Stokes aster making its debut in 2025. Nearby is Truffula Pink gomphrena, also a butterfly champ.

The Garden Guy used to drive Mississippi’s Highway 49 from Hattiesburg to Gulfport to fall in love with the native Stokes aster. They aren’t just native to Mississippi but found throughout the South. I have loved them at homes I have owned and in places like the Columbus Botanical Garden when I was director. I promise, you will be stoked over a new variety making its debut next year.

Totally Stoked is a new series courtesy of North Carolina State University breeding and Proven Winners' ability to recognize not only what this plant has to offer but also to get it into production in a major way. All over the country gardeners, garden clubs and butterfly lovers, clamor for native plants. Totally Stoked will quench this thirst in several different ways.

The Garden Guy has been trialing it, and Totally Stoked has been nothing short of sheer joy. First. there are two colors: Totally Stoked Whitecaps and Totally Stoked Riptide. So far, I have had Eastern Tiger Swallowtails, Pipevine Swallowtails, American Lady, Gray Hairstreak and Fiery Skippers all partaking of the nectar.

With a structure that can compete with a passion flower The Garden Guy tried a small tropical setting with Totally Stacked Riptide Stokes aster, ColorBlaze Lime Time coleus and Hollywood Disco Diva hibiscus that makes its Proven Winners debut in 2025.
With a structure that can compete with a passion flower The Garden Guy tried a small tropical setting with Totally Stacked Riptide Stokes aster, ColorBlaze Lime Time coleus and Hollywood Disco Diva hibiscus that makes its Proven Winners debut in 2025.

Not too many plants can challenge the intricate structure and beauty of the passion flower, but the Stokes aster will leave the novice and the seasoned gardener alike totally mesmerized ― or, dare we say, "totally stoked?" Even the Garden Guy was spellbound looking at the photo I took of the Totally Stoked Whitecaps.

The flowers are huge, reaching the 3- to 4-inch range. Now, the best part may be that they bring in bees and butterflies like there is no tomorrow and resists being eaten by deer and rabbits.

Totally Stoked Riptide and Whitecaps will form clumps, plants reaching 26-inches in height and up to 36-inches in width. Although they are native to the South, they are cold hardy in zones 5-9. Provide plenty of sun and fertile, well-drained soil for best performance.

Make your beds well drained by incorporating 3 to 4 inches of organic matter like fine pine bark, humus or compost. Well-drained soil is pretty much mandatory if you want it to have a long-lived perennial. Wet winter feet can spell doom.

Totally Stoked Whitecaps is also making its debut in 2025 and shows the intricate structure of the Stokes aster.
Totally Stoked Whitecaps is also making its debut in 2025 and shows the intricate structure of the Stokes aster.

Big clumps of asters add fun to garden design

My main area of design has been so much fun in creation. I’ve combined Totally Stoked Riptide with Meant to Bee Royal Raspberry and Queen Nectarine agastache. Then Truffula Pink gomphrena and Meteor Shower verbena were added. But there is more, I also have Luminary Prismatic Pink and Luminary Ultraviolet tall garden phlox.

Their intricate structure can compete with that of the passion flower. For this very reason, I’ve always wanted to create a small tropical setting and this year, I did it with extra plants. I used ColorBlaze Lime Time coleus and Hollywood Disco Diva hibiscus that will also be making its debut in the Proven Winners lineup next year. The lime green, orange and blue were perfect.

Stokes asters sometimes rest in summer to bloom again in the fall. The large clumps that I mentioned earlier are easy to divide in early spring. When growth emerges next spring feed with a light application of the fertilizer and again in mid-summer.

The late afternoon sun highlights this combination of Totally Stoked Riptide Stokes aster with Meant to Bee Royal Raspberry agastache and Luminary Prismatic Pink tall garden phlox.
The late afternoon sun highlights this combination of Totally Stoked Riptide Stokes aster with Meant to Bee Royal Raspberry agastache and Luminary Prismatic Pink tall garden phlox.

Follow Norman Winter on Facebook @NormanWinterTheGardenGuy for more photos and garden inspiration. See more columns by Norman at SavannahNow.com/lifestyle/home-garden/.

This article originally appeared on Savannah Morning News: Totally stoked asters make debut for 2025 gardens