Gemo Hypericum
A Tough, Long-Blooming Native Shrub Smothered in Golden Flowers
Gemo Hypericum (Hypericum kalmianum 'Gemo') is a compact, tidy native shrub that covers itself in radiant yellow flowers from June well into late summer. A selection of Kalm's St. John's Wort native to the Upper Midwest, it's drought-tough, pollinator-friendly, and about as low-maintenance as a flowering shrub gets. Whether you're edging a sunny bed in Plymouth, massing a low hedge in Woodbury, or filling a hot, dry spot in Eden Prairie — Gemo brings months of gold to zone 4b–5a yards.
Gemo Hypericum Plant Details
| Attribute | Detail |
|---|---|
| Scientific Name | Hypericum kalmianum 'Gemo' |
| Common Names | Kalm's St. John's Wort, Shrubby St. John's Wort |
| Mature Height | 2–3 feet |
| Mature Width | 2–3 feet |
| Growth Rate | Moderate — dense, tightly branched, very tidy mound |
| Sun | Full sun (6+ hours). Tolerates light shade; blooms best in full sun. |
| Water | Low to moderate. Drought-tolerant once established; adaptable to most soils. |
| USDA Zones | 4–7 (Twin Cities is zone 4b–5a) |
| Soil | Very adaptable — tolerates Minnesota clay-loam, sandy, and rocky soils; handles dry sites well. |
| Foliage | Deciduous — narrow, willow-like blue-green leaves all season; little fall color. |
| Winter Hardiness | Reliable to -30°F. Fully hardy in the Twin Cities. |
| Deer Resistance | Strongly deer-resistant — rarely browsed. |
| Native Status | Upper Midwest native — supports native bees and the Lawns to Legumes program. |
| Bloom | Radiant golden-yellow flowers with showy stamens, June through August (sporadic into fall); bees love them. |
Gemo Hypericum Uses in Minnesota Landscapes
Low hedges and massing
Gemo's dense, uniform habit makes it ideal for a low informal hedge or a clean mass planting. Space 24–30 inches apart for a continuous band of summer gold along a walk or foundation.
Tough, dry, and hot sites
Its drought tolerance suits that baking strip along a south-facing wall, driveway, or boulevard in Burnsville or Bloomington where thirstier shrubs fail. It shrugs off poor, rocky soil.
Pollinator and native gardens
The pollen-rich yellow flowers are a magnet for native bees through mid-summer, making Gemo a natural fit for a Lawns to Legumes or naturalistic planting across the Twin Cities metro.
Best Time to Plant Gemo Hypericum in Minnesota
Fall (late August–early October) is the ideal planting window. Soil is still warm for root development, cool air reduces transplant stress, and the plant gets 6–8 weeks to establish roots before ground freeze (typically mid-November in the Twin Cities).
Spring (late April–May, after the ground thaws) is the second-best window, giving the shrub a full season to establish before its first winter.
Avoid summer planting (June–August) when possible. Never plant after mid-October or before late April — frozen ground or frost-heaving kills new roots.
How to Plant Gemo Hypericum
- Dig wide, not deep — 2–3× the root ball width, same depth as the container.
- Gemo isn't fussy about soil, but on heavy clay loosen a wide area to improve drainage.
- Backfill with native soil mixed with 20–30% compost; firm gently and water in well.
- Space plants 24–30 inches apart for a hedge or mass; give single shrubs room to round out.
- Build a shallow water basin the first season, then flatten it before winter.
- Mulch 2–3 inches with shredded bark or wood chips, kept 2 inches off the stems. Do not use gravel mulch in Minnesota.
Watering Gemo Hypericum in Minnesota
First Year Watering Schedule
- Weeks 1–2: Every 2–3 days, deep and slow (15–25 minutes)
- Month 1–2: Every 4–5 days
- Month 3–6: Every 7 days or less; skip during rainy stretches
- Stop watering 2–3 weeks before ground freeze (typically late October in the Twin Cities metro).
After Year One
Established Gemo is genuinely drought-tolerant and needs water only during extended dry spells. Let natural rainfall do most of the work — this is a plant that prefers lean conditions over pampering.
Drip Irrigation in Minnesota
If used, place emitters 12–18 inches from the trunk; this shrub needs far less water than most, so run shorter cycles. Always winterize the system — blow out the lines before freeze and shut timers off by early October.
Will Gemo Hypericum survive a Minnesota winter?
Yes — it's reliably hardy to zone 4 and, as an Upper Midwest native, it's well adapted to our winters. A light mulch the first winter is all it needs.
Do I need to prune it?
Very little. For the tidiest habit and best bloom, cut it back by about a third in early spring before growth starts — it flowers on new wood.
Is it deer-resistant?
Strongly. Deer almost always pass over St. John's Wort, making Gemo dependable even in high-pressure suburbs like Minnetonka and Eden Prairie.
Does it tolerate dry, poor soil?
Yes — that's one of its best traits. Gemo thrives in lean, dry, rocky, or sandy sites where many shrubs struggle, making it perfect for hot boulevards and low-water beds.
You May Also Like
- Cobalt-n-Gold Hypericum — a silver-blue-foliage St. John's Wort with the same golden flowers
- Shop the full Three Timbers Minnesota catalog — zone 4-hardy plants hand-selected for Twin Cities yards
- Full Sun & Low-Water Plants — tough shrubs and perennials for hot, dry sites
How Many Gemo Hypericum Do I Need?
For a continuous low hedge or band of summer gold, space Gemo 2.5 feet on center (the body's 24–30 inch spacing):
| Run Length | Plants Needed (2.5 ft spacing) |
|---|---|
| 5 feet | 2 plants |
| 10 feet | 4 plants |
| 20 feet | 8 plants |
| 30 feet | 12 plants |
In a pollinator bed, plant drifts of 3–5 on the same spacing; a single mound fills a 3-foot circle at the front of a border.
Gemo Hypericum Season-by-Season in Minnesota
- Spring: Cut back by a third in early spring — it blooms on new wood — then narrow blue-green, willow-like leaves clothe the tidy mound.
- Summer: The main event: radiant golden flowers with showy puffball stamens from June through August, worked constantly by native bees.
- Fall: Sporadic late blooms taper off; small ornamental seed capsules ripen as the foliage quietly drops.
- Winter: A dense, twiggy low mound with persistent seed capsules — unbothered by deer and hardy through Twin Cities winters.
At a Glance
✔ Minnesota Native ✔ Pollinator-Friendly ✔ Deer-Resistant ✔ Drought-Tolerant
Plant It With
- Cobalt-n-Gold Hypericum — silver-blue foliage with the same golden flowers for a two-texture hypericum pairing.
- Gro-Low Sumac — a tough native groundcover for the same hot, dry, low-water sites.
- Firefly Diervilla — native, drought-tough, with glowing foliage that echoes Gemo's gold theme.
- Karl Foerster Feather Reed Grass — vertical plumes rising behind the low golden mounds.
Is Gemo Hypericum Right for Your Yard?
Choose Gemo for full-sun, lean, dry, or rocky sites — boulevards, south walls, driveway strips — where you want months of golden bloom, native-bee value, and true deer resistance on a tidy 2–3 foot mound. It's not a fit for soggy ground or deep shade, where it thins out and bloom drops off sharply.