Ellen has been gardening with and appreciating native plants for eleven years in north metro Atlanta. She is especially fond of native shrubs and trees but is willing to learn to love herbaceous plants as well. Helping others to see the beauty and versatility of Georgia's native plants, whether it be in the wild or in the garden, is both a passion and a compulsion -- just ask her kids! Ellen is an active member of the Georgia Native Plant Society and the Georgia Botanical Society. She uses her personal blog, usinggeorgianativeplants.blogspot.com, to share seasonal ideas and pictures about native plants in her area.
 

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Yellow Summer Flowers
by Ellen Honeycutt - posted 08/25/11

Late summer brings out an incredible amount of yellow blooms in the native garden.  Many of these yellow-blooming plants are members of the Asteraceae family, also known as Compositae.  If you’ve ever heard someone mention the acronym “DYC”, these are the flowers they mean – as in “dang yellow composites” – because there are so many of them, they look a lot alike, and they hybridize among themselves to create new forms.

Composite flowers are usually composed of both disk and ray flowers – and a lot of them. What you consider "a"  flower is actually many flowers in an arrangement.  The disk flowers are tiny flowers located at the center of the structure while the ray flowers are what many folks consider to be the “petals”.  Here is a very good site that explains and provides more examples of these terms.

Coreopsis major

Probably the first of these to bloom in my area is the large flowered Coreopsis, Coreopsis major.  It’s a great plant, hardy and tough as the dickens.  However, I find the flowers extremely hard to photograph because they don’t always look so good when you get close up (but you can see I found one here)!  Still, I would recommend them because they are fine with poor soil and dry conditions.  The whorled foliage is very attractive from spring to fall.
 
I will cover the next three genera alphabetically because it is hard to say which starts blooming first: Helianthus, Rudbeckia or Silphium.
 
 
 
 
 
 
The genus Helianthus is generally known as the Sunflower family.  The annual sunflower, Helianthus annus, is a member, but there are many other species that are perennial garden favorites.  The woodland sunflower, Helianthus divaricatus, is a stoloniferous plant which means that it grows by underground roots to make expanding colonies.  In rich and moist garden soil that means it will be a bit aggressive.  It normally grows on dry, partially shaded woodland edges.
 
Taller members of this genus include Helianthus tuberosus, which is known as Jerusalem artichoke (at least you can eat it if it gets too aggressive!), and Helianthus angustifolius, the late blooming swamp sunflower.  I have seen majestic stands of swamp sunflower blooming in gardens in October – the statuesque clumps are much admired by those that pass by.
 

Helianthus annus

Helianthus divaricatus

Helianthus tuberosus

The flowers in the genus Rudbeckia are known as coneflowers.  One of the most commonly sold forms is Rudbeckia fulgida ‘Goldsturm’ and is usually referred to as Black-eyed Susan.  I have (and enjoy) another form known as Rudbeckia fulgida var. fulgida which is often known as Orange Coneflower.  I used to think this was a later blooming form – now I know that it is late for me because the deer keep eating it in spring and summer!  But that means I get a lot of blooms eventually due to all that “pruning”.  

Rudbeckia fulgida ‘Goldsturm’

 
The one that many folks consider to be the “original” Black-eyed Susan is Rudbeckia hirta which is considered to be short lived perennial (but reseeds nicely).  It is easily distinguished from Rudbeckia fulgida because the plant parts (stems and leaves) have many hairs.  It is one of my favorites, and I love to see it growing on roadsides and in fields this time of year.  A similar, but taller, species is Rudbeckia triloba, which is sometimes called Brown-eyed Susan.  Some of the leaves have 3 lobes which helps to distinguish it from R. hirta in the field.  Tired of the dark eyes?  Not all the coneflowers have them.  Cut-leaved coneflower, Rudbeckia laciniata, has greenish cones.  There is also the yellow-flowring genus Ratibida which shares the common name coneflower with Rudbeckia.  I know that many people think that using the Latin name is unnecessary, but you can see here that common names can mean different plants!
 

Rudbeckia hirta

Rudbeckia triloba

 
Another genus with great height is Silphium, known as “rosinweed”.  Probably one of the most well known members of this genus is Cup Plant, Silphium perfoliatum (also known as Silphium connatum).  The stem pierces the leaves, creating a “cup” at the junction.  This cup can fill up with rainwater, allowing birds to drink from it.  Kidney-leaf rosinweed (Silphium compositum) is often found in my area.  I find the leaves to be quite beautiful – thick, sculpted, and decorated with red veins.  In late July I attended the Cullowhee Native Plant conference, and several vendors had Silphium integrifolium for sale.  Members of this genus deserve more use in the garden – they are dependable and drought tolerant perennials for late summer blooms.
 

Silphium compositum

Silphium compositum

Silphium perfoliatum

Silphium perfoliatum

Picture by M. Tucker

 
Confused by all these disk and ray flowers?  Looking at the BACK of the flower may be helpful.  The green bracts which hold the flower can be very distinctive.  Here are pictures of the back of the flowers discussed above.
 

Rudbeckia back

Helianthus back

Coreopsis back

Silphium back

 
Another tall yellow flower blooming now is Smallanthus uvedalius, known as Bear's foot because of the leaf shape.  I photographed this a couple of weeks ago on a roadside.
 

Smallanthus uvedalius

Smallanthus uvedalius

 
Other yellow flowers that you may see this time of year: St. John’s Wort (Hypericum, which is usually a type of shrub), Goldenrod (Solidago altissima is probably the most common one on roadsides), Bidens (known as tickseed for the shape of its seeds), Maryland aster (Chrysopsis mariana), Wing-stem (Verbesina alternifolia or V. occidentalis) and Silk grass (Pityopsis graminifolia).
 

Hypericum punctatum

Solidago altissima

Pityopsis graminifolia

 
I hope to do a full blog entry on just Solidago soon.  I think it is a genus that is under-appreciated.  In the meantime, enjoy the many ways that yellow appears in our summer roadsides.
 

 

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