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Planting, Growing, and Caring for Black-eyed Susans
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My black eyed Susan's are falling over. Can I cut them back without hurting them as far as reseeding
Hi Linda,
It is a good idea to let the plants self sow by leaving the blooms on through the fall (some people stake their plants, others just let them flop over). When they are good and dry, then cut them back and shake the seed heads around to scatter them.
I may be moving throughout the winter and am wondering if i can somehow bring my blackeyed susans in for the winter as i am with my bulbs?
Love the almanac ❤️
Planted them several years ago, everything normal. This year some or all of the petals are missing from the flowers. What could be doing this? Doesn't seem like the pests you list would focus just on petals. It has been dry this summer but I have been watering. Surely it wouldn't be fertilization needed because that would affect the whole plant. Any ideas?
I haven’t had missing flower petals from black-eyed susans but this has happened with my coneflowers. This is usually a mite issue; they suck the nutrients and distort the flowers so there are missing petals. You need to cut back the inflected flowers to the ground in the fall and destroy all the infected parts (trash them, not compost).
appreciate the suggestion. I did look after dark with a flashlight and saw only two different small beetles that appeared innocent of the crime. I might try a soapy spray because they are apparently going to look this way for months unless something is done and it would be nice to have some actual flowers this summer.
We bought our house last year, and I planted some pots of black-eyed susans in our front beds. They produced blooms all summer and apparently dropped seeds, but I stopped watering them in the fall, anticipating a freeze that never came, and the original plants died. Now, it's the following summer and the seeds have sprouted and grown to over two feet tall, but I'm not seeing any blooms or buds. Is it possible that I have a variety that only blooms in the second year? Can I expect to see any blooms this summer?
There are 25 species of Rudbeckia including perennials, biennials, and annuals. It is possible you have a biennial, which would explain the absence of flower buds. Without knowing the parentage, it’s not possible to say for certain if you will see blooms this year.
I purchased black eyed susans that were healthy and full of buds for flowers. I planted in good garden soil and watered. it seems that something is eating the flower buds. What should I use to deter whatever is eating the plant...