Also receive the Daily newsletter including gardening tips, weather, astronomical events, and more.
Planting, Growing, and Caring for Black-eyed Susans
ADVERTISEMENT
2 inches from the soil should do it. Great bloom next season.
I cut the heads off after the first hard freeze. They are all black and dead. Should I stir the seeds in the dirt to reseed for next year or do I wait until spring to seed? Which is best to make sure they come back?
Want to know if the black dead heads are the seeds and can they be planted for
next year
You can cut back Black Eye Susan 2 inches from the soil. This will energize the plant. They will grow hearty the next blooming season.
should the seeds from dried autumn blooms be saved for next spring?naturally they would fall and scatter.
Plants bloom first two years nicely now....just lots of leaves and no flowers. What to do?
Not sure what to do…
From time to time, people have written of this problem. Before you can do anything you need to know what the problem is; here is our advice. See also the info under “Pests” above:
• There are also foliage-loving bugs. Go out after dark with a flashlight and examine your plant for slugs, earwigs, whiteflies, etc. (Google for photos or see our pest library). Once you identify the pest, you can figure out a control to deter it.
• One possibility is that your soil has become depleted … trying enriching it, but not too much. If they are super cramped, they may need to be divided. Another possibility is that surrounding plants or structures may have changed since last year and your ladies are getting less sun.
• Go out after dark with a flashlight and examine your plant for slugs, earwigs, whiteflies, etc. (Google for photos or see our pest library). Once you identify the pest, you can figure out a control to deter it.
• If this happened overnight, it would normally be a deer or rabbit or animal. They usually leave the stem and go for the leaves.
Otherwise, look carefully at the leaves. Caterpillars tend to chew holes in the leaves. Slugs chews ragged, irregular shaped holes in leaves that cross the veins. See our pests and critter library to I.D. and learn more:
My flowers have, what seems to be, a much smaller flower coming out of the black part of my flowers.?
i am growing a susan vine, she's beautiful. only problem i am having at the moment is that some of the leaves have little holes and i don't understand what can be doing this to my susan vine. please help...
There are foliage-loving bugs about! Go out after dark with a flashlight and examine your plant for slugs, earwigs, whiteflies, etc. (Google for photos or see our pest library). Once you identify the pest, you can figure out a control to deter it.