Used in food plots for birds, erosion control, and prairie mixes. Perennial.
| Grow Height | Bloom Period | Growing Regions | Planting Rate Acre |
Bloom Color |
| 3-10′ | July-Oct. | 5 PLS | Yellow |
Used in food plots for birds, erosion control, and prairie mixes. Perennial.
Used in food plots for birds, erosion control, and prairie mixes. Perennial.
| Grow Height | Bloom Period | Growing Regions | Planting Rate Acre |
Bloom Color |
| 3-10′ | July-Oct. | 5 PLS | Yellow |
| Weight | 1 lbs |
|---|
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Native, cool-season perennial which can grow up to three feet tall. The plant produces a basal rosette of leaves that can grow eight inches long.
Showy blue and white flowers with some other colors from pink to lavender identified in select locations. Must be planted in the fall for spring blooms.
Stiff goldenrod occurs in open woods, glades, thickets and prairies. Features tiny, bright yellow, daisy like flowers in dense, erect, flat-topped terminal clusters.
Native to Texas and many or the plains and mountain states. Often found growing in shallow soils, preferring disturbed sites in dry, sandy or gravelly soil with a neutral PH.
Well adapted native annual wildflower to the plains states. Blooms first year into late summer.
Attractive to butterflies, Ox-eye Sunflowers are fairly tolerant of drought and partially shady conditions but prefer full sun and moist, well-draining soil conditions.
Native to Central Great Plains and Southern Midwest, found on low-lying sites or ditches. Full sun. Has a long bloom season and is one of the best native annual wildflowers.
Tolerates drought, full sun, or part shade. Annual used for meadow mixes due to blue color. Seeds easily.
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