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Planting, Growing, and Caring for Coneflowers
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I live in Northern Kentucky and have finally got oriental poppies to grow and flower, I planted some cone flowers around them to fill in once they go dormant in the summer. A friend told me that the cone .will take over and I will lose my poppies. Is this true and if so how can I keep both as I really like both plants
It’s true that happy coneflowers can grow with vigor and possibly shade out less vigorous plants. The ticket to keeping both species is to be sure to divide your coneflowers every other season, and save and disperse the seeds of your poppies. By editing the coneflower and aiding seed dispersal of the poppies, you will help to give them a chance (and room) to propagate.
I cut my coneflower down in the fall and still nothing growing in June, will it eventually start growing?
Coneflower can be very temperamental, especially if it is a hybrid. If it makes it past the first winter you have a good chance it will be around awhile. Since it should start blooming in July, if you have no greenery now it is probably dead. Many expert gardeners recommend treating coneflower hybrids as an annual and if it comes up in the spring that is a bonus!
I think a groundhog chomped on my coneflower. Will it make a recovery this year? It still has a lot of plant left.
Yes, groundhogs love coneflowers. I’m afraid trapping or disrupting their tunnel system is the only solution. If the groundhog just ate part of the plant, it may produce more buds, but the groundhog may also return. Using pots is always a solution next time or you need to use fencing.
While cleaning a vinyl fence with a strong bleach mixture this past end, the mixture was sprayed on the plants which were about 12 to 15 inches tall. After 2 days the leaves are curling and turning a greyish brown color and look even worse today. Do you think the cone flower plants will survive. What should I do at this point. Thank you.
Hi, Thank you for your response. In addition to the leaves the stems are also spotted and the plants usually grow at a quick pace at this time of the year on Cape Cod. It appears all growth has stopped. If I cut the plants down to ground level do you think it may help? Also, it has poured several times since they were sprayed with the bleach. The bleach has probably entered the soil but could have been diluted. Thank you again.
Only time will tell, Marie. Remove the leaves that are curling and turning color.
How do I go about transferring my some kind of tulip I believe. Either. Planter r ground?