Rudbeckias are
a must for
gardeners
By
Norman Winter
MSU
Horticulturist
Central Mississippi Research & Extension
Center
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Indian
Summer is a gorgeous annual that reaches 42 inches
in height and produces its heart out with large,
softball-size blooms.
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As you
drive down Mississippi's highways and by-ways, don't lament
that we don't fare well with blue bonnets, because this year
our own wild phlox, coreopsis, Queen Anne's lace and Indian
Pinks have been as pretty as a painting.
Another
of my favorite wildflowers -- the black-eyed Susan -- is
just starting to advertise its landscape attributes to all
who pass by. Their roadside performance should be a clear
signal they will work just as well in our yards.
Botanically
speaking, black-eyed Susans are Rudbeckias. Rudbeckia hirta
is native to Mississippi, and Indian Summer, a Mississippi
Medallion winner, is of this variety. It was also an
All-America Selections winner and recently won the Cut
Flower of the Year Award by the American Specialty Cut
Flower Growers Association.
Indian
Summer is one gorgeous flower even if it is an annual. The
plant reaches 42 inches in height and produces its heart out
with large, softball-size blooms. A mass planting of these
combined with a mass of purple coneflowers will make your
border look like you are the gardener of the year. Their
site and care is fairly standard.
Also
look for Prairie Sun, this year's All America Selections
winner, with a primrose band around the petal
tips.
There
are 30 to 40 other species of Rudbeckia native to the United
States. One of my favorites is the Rudbeckia fulgida. The
Goldsturm variety was a Louisiana Select Plant of the Year
and a U.S. Perennial Plant of the Year.
The
flowers are not as large as Indian Summer, but they bloom
from May until the first hard frost and then return in the
spring. The leaves are fairly large, oval and dark green.
Keep well watered during droughts, and remove dead flower
heads for maximum bloom. Most years, gardeners are rewarded
with more flower stalks being produced in late summer or
early fall.
I
occasionally run across a gardener who thinks these are too
aggressive and vigorous, but I feel passionately that these
are among the best plants for any gardener -- beginner or
expert.
Rudbeckia
fulgida are great planted along sunny borders. I have
combined them with the Biloxi Blue and the violet Tapien
verbenas. They also work well with asters, goldenrods,
homestead purple verbena, and liatris or gay
feather.
The
Rudbeckia triloba is another outstanding species for
Mississippi. This is a Georgia Gold Medal winner, and it
could qualify here as well. It is a prolific blooming
perennial that is sometimes treated as an annual.
It has
an abundance of yellow flowers with button-shaped, black
centers produced at the ends of many-branched stems. It is
very erect, growing about 3 feet tall, spreading and bushy.
The leaves are dark green and divided into three oval parts,
hence the name triloba.
Rudbeckia
triloba originated on the prairies of the United States.
Plant in full sun in organic-rich beds. To extend the
plant's life, promptly cut back flowers just as the bloom
finishes, or let the seeds ripen and collect
them.
Plant
in the middle of the border with cosmos, zinnias or the new
Angelmist angelonias called Summer Snapdragons. Be bold and
create large drifts of color.
If you
would like a Rudbeckia with a green eye, look no further
than Irish Eyes. This plant has a green cone and single
flowers opening 4 to 5 inches across. With foliage reaching
about 30 inches tall, Irish Eyes are striking and unusual.
They are grown as annuals or short-lived
perennials.
If
conditioned, black-eyed Susans are great cut flowers with a
long vase life. The secret is to place a cardboard sheet on
top of a deep pan containing 100- to 110-degree water. Cut
holes in the cardboard to allow the stems to be placed
through it and into the water. When the petals are flat and
the stem straight, it is ready for the vase.
We can
learn a lot from the roadside, especially when it comes to
tough, beautiful flowers. Once we have learned this lesson,
the next step is to take a trip to the garden center to get
our own flowers.
-30-
Released:
June 2, 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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