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Gaillardia x grandiflora
I almost always choose species plants when adding wildflowers to the garden. They're of hardier stock and can take the tough conditions dished out by Clay and Limestone!
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What I didn't tell you was that three Coreopsis BIG BANG™ 'Redshift' and one Eupatorium dubium 'Little Joe' came home with me that day.
it's a magnet for the little pollinators |
Thank you Darrell Probst for this fantastic cross of threadleaf and grandiflora coreopsis! It took you 8 years of intensive breeding and the crossing of 8 species of Coreopsis to get 'Redshift', but, it only took me one season to fall head over heals in love with it!
I can't sing its praises enough. It's been blooming since summer abruptly replaced spring and it just made sense to add more.
I can't sing its praises enough. It's been blooming since summer abruptly replaced spring and it just made sense to add more.
A perfect plant for a large or small garden |
Even the drought didn't stop it! It needs full sun, good drainage and daily deadheading of spent flowers. Granted, two of those are hard to get at C and L; so I planted it in a container, in the best draining soil, in the sunniest spot in the Susan's border! It rocks out there!
the petals began to redden when the temperatures dropped to the 70s this past week |
But, that's not all. In my garden it was lovely buttery yellow with a hint of red during the hottest weather, but, when the rain moved in and the temperatures dipped to the 70s it shifted to a deeper red. The name, 'Redshift' sure makes sense!
That leaves the Joe-Pye! Just look at that budding beauty! Who could turn that face down! The pollinators won't either!
xxoogail
Inspired by the words of Elizabeth Lawrence, “We can have flowers nearly every month of the year,” Carol of May Dreams Gardens started Garden Bloggers Bloom Day. On the 15th of every month, garden bloggers from all over the world share their garden blooms. So head over to Carol's to take the Mr Linky magic carpet ride to more gardens than you can imagine visiting in one day! This is my July 2012 contribution.
Gail Eichelberger is a gardener and therapist in Middle Tennessee. She loves wildflowers and native plants and thoroughly enjoys writing about the ones she grows at Clay and Limestone. She reminds all, that the words and images are the property of the author and cannot be used without written permission.