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Black-Eyed Susans

7 Perennials That Multiply Without Extra Care

January 7, 2026 by Brandon Marcus Leave a Comment

These Are 7 Perennials That Multiply Without Extra Care

Gardening can feel like a delicate dance of watering, weeding, fertilizing, and praying for the sun to shine just right. But imagine stepping into your garden and finding plants thriving on their own, spreading joy and color without you lifting a finger. Certain perennials are the masters of self-proliferation, turning your backyard into a vibrant,…

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Filed Under: garden tips Tagged With: bee balm, Black-Eyed Susans, creeping phlox, Daylillies, flower growth, flowers, garden tips, gardening tips, gardens, Hostas, lavender, perennial beds, perennial care, Perennials, sedum

10 Flowers That Come Back Every Year Without Extra Spending

January 5, 2026 by Brandon Marcus Leave a Comment

10 Flowers That Come Back Every Year Without Extra Spending

Gardening thrills don’t have to drain your wallet or demand endless trips to the garden center. Some flowers are natural overachievers, popping back up year after year like loyal friends who never ghost you. These plants turn one smart purchase into seasons of color, fragrance, and pollinator magic. They laugh in the face of harsh…

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Filed Under: garden tips Tagged With: backyard flowers, bee balm, Black-Eyed Susans, coneflower, Daylillies, easy fall flowers to grow, flower arrangements, flower bed, flower beds, flower bloom, flower blooms, flowers, Hostas, Irises, lavender, Peonies, sedum, Shasta Daisies

The Perennials You Should Split and Move Right Now

November 22, 2025 by Brandon Marcus Leave a Comment

There Are Some Perennials That You Should Split and Move Right Now

All gardeners understand the unique kind of urgency that hits at least once a season—the moment you glance at your flower beds and realize half your perennials are staging a crowded riot. Roots tangle, blossoms fight for elbow room, and suddenly the plants you lovingly tucked into the soil a few years ago are now…

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Filed Under: garden tips Tagged With: bee balm, Black-Eyed Susans, conflowers, coreopsis, Daylillies, Hostas, perennial, perennial care, Perennials, sedum, Shasta Daisies, siberian irises, yarrow

12 Native Plants That Establish Best in Autumn

October 29, 2025 by Brandon Marcus Leave a Comment

Some Native Plants Establish Best in Autumn

Autumn isn’t just about pumpkin spice lattes and cozy sweaters—it’s also the golden season for planting. While spring often steals the gardening spotlight, fall quietly offers the perfect conditions for new plants to put down roots and thrive. Cooler temperatures, fewer weeds, and steady moisture levels create an environment that’s practically a growth invitation for…

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Filed Under: garden tips Tagged With: autumn, autumn gardening tips, best plants, Black-Eyed Susans, blazing star, butterfly milkweed, caring for plants, coneflower, eastern red columbine, fall, fall flowers, fall garden, fall gardening, fall planting, fall plants, feeding plants, little bluestem, native plants, plants, wild bergamot, wild lupine

6 Wildflowers to Scatter Before the Snow Comes

October 23, 2025 by Brandon Marcus Leave a Comment

There Are Certain Wildflowers You Should Scatter Before the Snow Comes

There’s something beautifully rebellious about sowing wildflowers just before winter arrives. While most people are hauling in their patio furniture and winterizing their gardens, you’re out there, hands in the cool soil, planning for next spring’s explosion of color. Scattering wildflower seeds before the snow hits isn’t just poetic—it’s strategic. The cold helps prepare the…

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Filed Under: garden tips Tagged With: Black-Eyed Susans, blanket flowers, cold weather, Coneflowers, cool weather, flower, flowers, lupines, planting wildflowers, poppies, snow, Snow Gardening, snowfall, weather, weather for gardening, weather forecast, wild bergamot, wildflowers

5 Perennials You Should Never Cut Back Now

October 14, 2025 by Brandon Marcus Leave a Comment

You should never cut back now on these 5 perennials.

It’s that time of year again—your pruning shears are practically calling your name. You’re eyeing your garden, itching to tidy up the fading blooms and dry stalks left behind after summer’s show. But before you start snipping like a maniac, stop right there! Some perennials need their messy, wild, slightly unkempt look right now to…

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Filed Under: garden tips Tagged With: Black-Eyed Susans, conflowers, fall flowers, flower, flower arrangements, flower gardens, flowering, flowers, garden tips, ornamental grasses, Perennials, planting flowers, russian sage, sedum, summer flowers

10 Perennials to Divide Before the First Frost

October 1, 2025 by Brandon Marcus Leave a Comment

There are 10 perennials to divide before first frost.

There’s something magical about a crisp autumn breeze—the kind that makes you reach for a sweater and look at your garden with both pride and a touch of panic. Summer blooms are fading, leaves are tumbling, and you realize winter is creeping closer than you’d like. But here’s a secret that seasoned gardeners know: fall…

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Filed Under: garden tips Tagged With: Black-Eyed Susans, Cold Weather Composting, Cold-weather plants, Coneflowers, Daylillies, fall flowers, flower, frost, Frost-tolerant crops, Hostas, Irises, Peonies, Perennials, sedum, Shasta Daisies, weather for gardening, weather forecast

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The $100 Mistake: Why Most New Gardeners Kill Their Plants in the First Week

The $100 Mistake: Why Most New Gardeners Kill Their Plants in the First Week

Fresh soil, shiny tools, and a cart full of plants can feel like the start of something magical—but for many beginners, that excitement turns into disappointment fast. Garden centers quietly rake in millions from what seasoned growers call the “$100 mistake,” when eager newcomers buy plants that never had a real chance. The first week…

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The Urine Secret: The “Gold” Fertilizer No One Wants to Talk About

The Urine Secret: The “Gold” Fertilizer No One Wants to Talk About

Gardeners love a good secret, especially one that turns waste into something wildly useful. Hidden in plain sight sits one of the most nutrient-rich, cost-free fertilizers available, yet it rarely earns a spot in everyday gardening conversations. That “liquid gold” delivers a powerful dose of nitrogen, phosphorus, and potassium—the exact trio plants crave for vigorous…

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The Molasses Mystery: Why Sugar Makes Your Microbes (And Plants) Go Wild

The Molasses Mystery: Why Sugar Makes Your Microbes (And Plants) Go Wild

Garden beds don’t run on luck—they run on life. Beneath every thriving plant sits a bustling underground world of microbes, fungi, and organic matter working nonstop to fuel growth. Toss a little sugar into that system, and suddenly things kick into overdrive like a backyard party that got out of hand. That’s where molasses steps…

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The Over-Fertilizing Trap: Why Your Expensive Store-Bought Food is Killing Your Crops

The Over-Fertilizing Trap: Why Your Expensive Store-Bought Food is Killing Your Crops

Lush leaves and explosive growth might look like success, but too much of a good thing can quietly sabotage an entire garden. Store-bought fertilizers promise fast results, glossy foliage, and bumper harvests, yet they often deliver a hidden cost when used without restraint. Gardeners eager to boost production frequently fall into the over-fertilizing trap, unknowingly…

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