Prairie Sun
shines in any landscape
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Prairie
Sun, an All-America Selections winner this year,
will reach from 24 to 36 inches in height and
probably will be the most attractive flower in the
landscape throughout a long blooming season. It
produces 5- to 9-inch flowers on 18-inch stems.
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By Norman
Winter
MSU
Horticulturist
Central Mississippi Research & Extension
Center
The
winter already seems long, and if you are like me, we're
ready to dig in the dirt. These next weeks before Spring
offer great opportunities to plan for our beds to be the
showiest ever. One plant you should consider is a new
Rudbeckia hirta, or black-eyed susan, known as Prairie
Sun.
Prairie
Sun is an All-America Selections winner this year, and I
never saw it less than picturesque in variety trials, even
in mid-August. It is one of those flowers that might be
considered a gloriosa daisy. These are normally treated as
annuals, although they do return occasionally.
Those
of you who loved the Mississippi Medallion award winning
Indian Summer with the large softball-sized flowers will
find this one equally enchanting. There are a couple of big
differences, however. Indian Summer has a brown or black
eye, and Prairie Sun has a green eye. Indian Summer is a
deep yellow gold, and Prairies Sun features the deep yellow
gold with a primrose band around the petals'
tips.
Like
Indian Summer, Prairie Sun will be a large plant reaching
from 24 to 36 inches in height and probably will be the most
attractive flower in the landscape during its long period of
bloom.
Prairie
Sun will perform with breathtaking beauty if planted in
fertile, well-drained soil in full sun. Amend tight soil
with 3 to 4 inches of organic matter, and till to a depth of
6 to 8 inches, adding two pounds of a slow-release
fertilizer per 100 square feet of bed space. A 12-6-6 or
balanced 8-8-8 blend with minor nutrients included are good
choices. Space 18 to 24 inches apart, planting at the same
depth they are growing in the container.
This is
a plant that can be grown from seed but usually the seeds of
first year All America Selections winners are hard to find.
Apply a layer of mulch after planting or when seedlings are
6 to 8 inches tall.
Deadhead
spent flower stalks to keep the plant tidy, to increase
production and to eliminate a potential site for disease.
Keep well watered and fed with frequent light applications
of fertilizer. Although considered an annual or biennial, it
will often re-seed if some seeds are left toward the end of
the season. The resulting seedlings will most likely not be
true to type, but will be none-the-less
attractive.
Don't
let the thought of this being an annual disturb you. Its
beauty is as though it was created for the perennial border.
The large, softball-sized flowers look even better when
combined with spiky blue or violet flowers from salvias,
angelonias or veronicas like Sunny Border Blue. Saturated
red flowers from zinnias or annual salvias also combine
well.
Prairie
Sun like Indian Summer produces 5- to 9-inch flowers on
18-inch stems, are ideally suited as cut flowers and have a
long vase life if you condition them. The secret is to place
a cardboard sheet on top of a deep pan of 100 to 110 degree
water.
Cut
holes in the cardboard to allow the stems to be placed
through and into the water. When the petals are flat and the
stem is straight, it is ready for the vase.
Hopefully,
you will plan to use Prairie Sun in your landscape. I know
you will love it. One other thing: this would be a good time
to remind your garden center to make sure they have plenty
on hand for spring planting.
-30-
Released:
Jan. 27, 2003
Contact: Norman
Winter,
(601) 857-2284
Editor's
Note: Ideal publication dates of Southern Gardening columns
are within one month of their release. Editors should
examine older columns carefully for any information that
could be time sensitive.
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