This species is a perennial herb, growing tall, with stems that are erect or sometimes spreading along the ground. It has a creeping underground rootstock, and produces annual stems that are simple or only sparsely branched. The stems range from smooth to softly covered with fine, star-shaped hairs. The leaves are narrow, leathery, and almost stalkless, sometimes clustered along the stem. They are
linear to
lanceolate, long, with smooth margins and a blunt or slightly pointed tip. The leaf bases taper or partly clasp the stem, and the surfaces are smooth to lightly hairy. The flowers are borne in a series of spaced whorls along the stem, each with two to six flowers. They are pink, mauve, or purple, often marked with darker flecks. The
calyx is grey and softly hairy, and the
corolla has a short tube with two lips, the lower lip slightly curved downward.
Stachys hyssopoides flowers from November to April.
Identification It is related to
S. dregeana but can be fairly easily distinguished from it by its leaves, which are narrower, firmer, and smoother. ==Distribution and habitat==