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Rudbeckia amplexicaulis ''
Common Names: Clasping Coneflower
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Rudbeckia amplexicaulis Clasping Coneflower is a hardy annual native to the southeastern United States, and has naturalized throughout most of North America. The identifiable black, cone-shaped heads are surrounded by bright yellow, drooping reflexed ray flowers. Often forms dense colonies in moist areas. A very heavy reseeder.
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Rudbeckia fulgida speciosa 'Newmanii'
Common Names: Compact Black-Eyed Susan
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Rudbeckia maxima forms attractive clumps or heads of foliage low to the ground. Somewhat wilder looking than most of the well-known cultivars, this species holds bright orange-yellow flowers with densely clustered petals on strong, wiry stems.
Rudbeckia 'Newmanii' opens in early May with lots of typically cheerful blooms atop 2' plants with dee....(cont.)
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Rudbeckia fulgida sullivantii 'Goldsturm'
Common Names: Black-eyed Susan, Orange Coneflower
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It is a showy daisy-like perennial with branched stems and long-petioled ovate or lance-shaped basal leaves to 5 in (13 cm) long and half as wide. The stem leaves are smaller, with short petioles and get progressively smaller up the stems. The leaves and stems are hairy, and the leaves have prominent veins. The numerous flower heads are a little le....(cont.)
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Rudbeckia grandiflora ''
Common Names: Black-Eyed Susan
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This Black-Eyed Susan like many of its species is of the dry prairie is truly a giant. Long-stalked leaves, hairy stems, robust form and gold daisies with dark eyes are characteristics of this drought-tolerant species. Each stem yields a single bloom, but with many, many flowering stems, you still get a good show of blooms. Flowers mature to showy ....(cont.)
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Rudbeckia laciniata 'Gold Drop'
Common Names: cutleaf coneflower, greenheaded coneflower, cone-disk sunflower, tall coneflower, thimbleweed
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Tall, erect and stately wildflower with yellow rays accented by a green center held by coarse, hairy stems. It is a free flowering, hardy Black Eyed Susan with double, 2 inch, yellow flowers on 2-3 foot stems. Very attractive used in cut flowers arrangements.
Tallest of the Coneflowers, 7 to 10 feet high. The leaves are unevenly divided into na....(cont.)
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Rudbeckia laciniata 'Herbstonne'
Common Names: Black-eyed Susan
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Herbstonne is a delightful plant with drooping warm yellow petals relaxing around a green central disc. In Southwestern Lower Michigan this plans did not require staking when planted in a sandy loam soil in full sun. However, you may want to stake it to make sure the flowers do not break at their peak performance. This plant can be a real eye cat....(cont.)
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Rudbeckia maxima ''Cabbage Leaf Coneflower''
Common Names: Great Coneflower, Cabbage Leaf Coneflower
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Rudbeckia maxima is an eye-catching perennial native to warm, moist pine woods and plains from Arkansas to Louisiana and into Texas. However, its range of acceptable climates extends farther north. R. maxima is an herbaceous perennial; plants go dormant in late fall and the foliage disappears until spring. But being a native of warmer southern regi....(cont.)
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Rudbeckia missouriensis ''
Common Names: Missouri Coneflower, Missouri Black-eyed Susan
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It is an attractive, long lived perennial wildflower excellent for cut flowers. It provides natural color when planted in the butterfly or rock garden. Missouri Black-eyed Susan is equally at home in formal flower beds or naturalized in a prairie meadow.
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Rudbeckia subtomentosa ''
Common Names: Sweet Black-eyed Susan, Sweet Coneflower
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One of the showiest of all the Rudbeckias, this is also among the most rugged. While many other plants fold in the heat of summer, Sweet Black Eyed Susan effortlessly maintains its luxuriant deep green foliage.
It receives its common names from the flower's sweet anise scent. Numerous 3 inch flowers consisting of yellow petals around dome-shape....(cont.)
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Rudbeckia triloba 'Brown-eyed Susan'
Common Names: Three-lobed Coneflower, Thin-Leaved Coneflower
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A summertime show stopper, this Rudbeckia is from the Great Plains. At its base, the larger leaves are trilobed, forming a handsome bushy mass that gives way to more narrow upper leaves and airy, branched, flowering stems.
Completely covered in glorious golden yellow petals circling jet black centers that fade to brown
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