This is actually my second time with rudbeckia (or, black eyed Susans). The first time I planted them in the yard they looked beautiful for one season and then were not seen again. I don't know if I accidentally weeded out the plants and any seedlings (rubeckia likes to seed itself, but not obnoxiously like the coreopsis, or at least it's not obnoxious in my yard.)
The red bee balm on the other side of the liatris is a couple of years old. I grabbed a seedling from a friend's house a couple of years ago since the pink and purple bee balm I'd purchased didn't do anything special and eventually petered out. The red seems to be doing well, but in the recent humidity has a recent case of powdery mildew. I gave it one application of sulfur spray (it's a fungicide for plants) and that seems to be working. I don't advocate using biological warfare in the garden since you never know what the downstream effect will be, but I was afraid that the powdery mildew would spread to my nearby peonies, so I did a quick application explicitly following the directions on the packaging.
While planting common varieties of plants may not seem exotic or unique, they do provide reliable consistent blooms. And if you like to repeat a plant in your landscape (which I recommend) a plant that seeds itself or can be divided is a really good pick if you also like to save money as well as time.
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