13,520 Garden Web Discussions | Perennials

id plzdoes anyone know this plant
Posted by MilaSan(5) May 7, 2014
7 Comments
Thank you for reporting this comment. Undo
MilaSan(5)

Hi All,

First, thank you all again. I will send a new photo tomorrow.

    Bookmark     May 18, 2014 at 11:01PM
Thank you for reporting this comment. Undo
cenepk10

Dang ! Can't wait to find out !

    Bookmark     May 18, 2014 at 11:57PM
Sign Up to comment
Thank you for reporting this comment. Undo
ellenr22 - NJ - Zone 6b/7a(6b/7a)

I haven't but they sound beautiful. I am going to find a picture of them.

I did find rudbeckias growing all over this season where I didn't plant them.
I don't know what kind they are yet.
It would be wonderful if they turn out to be reseeds of the cherry brandy that I lost to the brutal winter.

    Bookmark     May 17, 2014 at 8:25AM
Thank you for reporting this comment. Undo
cenepk10

Rudbeckias.... Not my favorite for thuggish tendencies.....

    Bookmark     May 18, 2014 at 11:42PM
Sign Up to comment
Thank you for reporting this comment. Undo
steve22802(7a VA)

Adam, what was the cultivar name of these Lupine seeds? Is it a mix of blues and purples?

    Bookmark     May 18, 2014 at 7:14AM
Thank you for reporting this comment. Undo
cenepk10

I planted lupine seeds last spring. They popped up as seedlings - then petered out. They are back this year and about 4" tall. I want your results !!!!!

    Bookmark     May 18, 2014 at 11:28PM
Sign Up to comment
Thank you for reporting this comment. Undo
linaria_gw

That sounds amazing. What kind of soil do you have? The ones around here are quite tame in heavy soil.

Thanks, bye, Lin

    Bookmark     May 18, 2014 at 2:10PM
Thank you for reporting this comment. Undo
jennypat Zone 3b NW MN(Zone 3b NW MN)

I wish I had that problem, mine has not peaked through the dirt yet.....and when it does it's a bit spindly. It's been in it's spot for about 3 years now.

    Bookmark     May 18, 2014 at 10:55PM
Sign Up to comment
plant idthank you in advance
Posted by MilaSan(5) May 7, 2014
2 Comments
Thank you for reporting this comment. Undo
NHBabs(4b-5aNH)

This looks to me like one of the native asters, perhaps Heart-leaved Aster, Symphyotrichum cordifolium (formerly called Aster cordifolius.)

    Bookmark     May 8, 2014 at 8:50AM
Thank you for reporting this comment. Undo
MilaSan(5)

This is a newer photo of the same plant, do you still think is the aster?

    Bookmark     May 18, 2014 at 10:04PM
Sign Up to comment
Thank you for reporting this comment. Undo
tmajor

I redid my entire front yard (1 acre) a few years back. Since then creeping charlie has taken over about 1/2 of it. I tried the most common weed killers found on the Internet, including Weed Be Gone Max. Nothing seemed to work. It was so bad this year, I felt I only had 2 options .. Round Up or plow it under and start over. I tried R/U on part of the lawn, which after about 1 week, has killed the grass, but only injured the C/C. Then I found another product, recommended for C/C, etc., to be used on turf. I bought a small quantity of this product to try, as it's expensive. The next day after application, the C/C was looking pretty sick. By about day 3, it was dead (or so it has appeared). I ordered a gallon and have sprayed the entire lawn. The remaining C/C and dandelions are once again looking sick, after 24 hours. This is the only product, which has killed the C/C and saved the lawn.The product is PBI Gordon's Speed Zone, bought from Pestrong.Com!

I now, have to till and reseed the areas, where I applied R/U.

This post was edited by tmajor on Sun, May 18, 14 at 16:06

    Bookmark     May 18, 2014 at 3:48PM
Thank you for reporting this comment. Undo
jayco(5b NY)

I have a ton of it too. I comfort myself by watching the bees -- they love it, so it's at least good for something.

    Bookmark     May 18, 2014 at 9:56PM
Sign Up to comment
Thank you for reporting this comment. Undo
ken_adrian Adrian MI cold Z5

you title implies the tree forum ...

no.. ground cover would not affect flowering ...

not much else to go on.. facts wise ..

ken

    Bookmark     May 18, 2014 at 5:23PM
Sign Up to comment
Thank you for reporting this comment. Undo
katob Z6ish, NE Pa

I'm curious to know what it is too. It's been showing up in my garden over the last few years and I've also seen it spread its way up and down the highway medians. Looks nice but it seems to like to spread. I thought it might be escaped rapeseed plants, and the spread comes from the planting of all those rapeseed fields for growing seed for canola oil.

    Bookmark     May 18, 2014 at 10:24AM
Thank you for reporting this comment. Undo
ken_adrian Adrian MI cold Z5

a very aggressive weed.. on my 5 acres ..

i suggest you dont wait to see what seed looks like ... or you will have thousands more next year ...

ken

    Bookmark     May 18, 2014 at 10:34AM
Sign Up to comment
ID please..not the redbud...Can u please udentify the flower..or weed?
Posted by gardenlady48(z5 IL) May 17, 2014
5 Comments
Thank you for reporting this comment. Undo
docmom_gw Zone 5 MI(5)

I wondered about both of those, also, but didn't think they fit, either. I'd wait until they prove themselves by blooming. You can always deadhead to keep them from reseeding. And a shovel will get rid of them if they are too big to yank. Maybe someone can still ID them for you. Good luck.

Martha

    Bookmark     May 18, 2014 at 9:01AM
Thank you for reporting this comment. Undo
katob Z6ish, NE Pa

Looks like it's spreading pretty good too. Might be a good plant to keep an eye on!

    Bookmark     May 18, 2014 at 10:11AM
Sign Up to comment
Thank you for reporting this comment. Undo
BlueBirdPeony(5b NE Ohio)

All very good comments and suggestions. No, I am not allergic to pine sap. I catch it from this bed because the tractor will catch some at the edge of the bed and the clippings kind of fly everywhere. I am pretty allergic.
Again, the PI isn't up yet. It's too early here. Maybe in a few weeks.
Last year I waited to have it sprayed until the bulb foliage had died and could be removed. Didn't want to lose my dafs. This year I might just clip them back early and see if they make it. I can always plant more I guess.
I will report back with pics of the PI.

    Bookmark     May 17, 2014 at 10:49PM
Thank you for reporting this comment. Undo
missingtheobvious(Blue Ridge 7a)

bragu talked about an allergy to pine pollen, not pine sap. My mom has that problem, and when she lived in a neighborhood full of 100' pines, she had to give up gardening during that season.

Take a look at your trees: do any have vines crawling up the trunks? (Not just 1/8" vine stems, but possibly 1-2" or larger.) Likely PI! Have someone non-allergic sever the vine stems near the ground and immediately paint both cut surfaces with Ortho PI killer concentrate. [If you did have PI vines up your trees, the entire area under those trees would have been showered all summer and fall with PI berries/seeds.]

PI stems and other parts remain contagious for up to 5 years, so you don't want to touch anything which might be a killed PI plant or a piece of a killed PI plant.

I have killed well over 95% or more of the PI which used to be on my acreage, but it's all over the neighborhood, and continues to show up here via the birds (predominantly under trees and fences), as well as seeds which wash downslope from the neighbors on both sides. On the south, numerous PI seedlings continue to show up in the lawn in particular places where runoff drains from the neighbor's property.

    Bookmark     May 17, 2014 at 11:22PM
Sign Up to comment
plant 4i d plz
Posted by MilaSan(5) May 7, 2014
9 Comments
Thank you for reporting this comment. Undo
Cindi McMurray

If you dig the whole clump and soak it in a bucket for a day, then the roots should untangle. Use either your hands or a fork, and pull them apart, trying to leave them in groups of 2 if you can. Replant, and they will bloom much better than if you leave them in that clump. Some pull apart easier than others...so you really do have to chop, but you lose a few plants in that process.
The leaves are too wide for Stella. This is a good time of year to divide daylilies.

    Bookmark     May 9, 2014 at 11:47AM
Thank you for reporting this comment. Undo
MilaSan(5)

Thanks to all! I can't wait to see what this garden turns out to be.

    Bookmark     May 17, 2014 at 11:18AM
Sign Up to comment
Plant 3plz id this plant thank you so much
Posted by MilaSan(5) May 7, 2014
11 Comments
Thank you for reporting this comment. Undo
wantonamara Z8 CenTex

I would do very little this year but take photos , clean things up, fertilize, trim things when it is obvious and get rid of OBVIOUS weeds. Think about possibilities , and sit back and let things be revealed. There maybe more surprises that will come up later. More damage can be done to a gerden through ignorance and impatience.

    Bookmark     May 12, 2014 at 10:51PM
Thank you for reporting this comment. Undo
MilaSan(5)

Here's a better photo of that plant

    Bookmark     May 16, 2014 at 4:45PM
Sign Up to comment
Thank you for reporting this comment. Undo
shadeyplace(7)

Love the fern on the wall!!!!

    Bookmark     May 16, 2014 at 1:25PM
Thank you for reporting this comment. Undo
floral_uk z.8/9 SW UK

Thanks, but that's an optical illusion there, shadyplace. The fern is on the ground not on a wall. That's paving going up to the base of the wall. The fern and the Parthenocissus are growing out of a tiny gap between the stones. You can see the situation better in this picture.

    Bookmark     May 16, 2014 at 2:03PM
Sign Up to comment
Thank you for reporting this comment. Undo
shadeyplace(7)

I googled geum coccineum 'eos' this might be the one.

    Bookmark     May 16, 2014 at 1:32PM
Sign Up to comment
Thank you for reporting this comment. Undo
Campanula UK Z8

dbl post

This post was edited by campanula on Tue, May 13, 14 at 12:16

    Bookmark     May 13, 2014 at 12:14PM
Thank you for reporting this comment. Undo
davidrt28 (zone 7)

It's always cracked me up to see US catalogs marketing "bred in NZ" delphiniums as "heat resistant". No commonly inhabited part of New Zealand has summers with an average high temperature over 80F. In other words, you'd have to go to the Atlantic coast around Cape Cod or north of Boston to find a part of the Continental-climate US with summers as cool as the very hottest parts of NZ. Maybe upper Michigan too. (of course I discount the obviously cool-summer Pacific coast...national catalog merchants obviously see them as a blip that marches to beat of its own drummer)

That being said I bought some supposedly heat-resistant variety at Groff's Plant Farm in Lancaster Co. back in 2012, and it has been perennial since then, in spite of the hellish summers of 2012 and 2013. Blooms and everything! Hasn't really increased in size though, which I think is telling. I'm sure it doesn't like it here.

EDIT: Actually I just double checked my spreadsheet: I have an odd note that I tried "'Stainless Steel' or 'Moonlight Blues'?" in 2011, and it died that summer. Maybe I couldn't remember the cultivar name? Early 2011 was worse for me than 2012. Then I bought something else in 2012 which has survived until now and bloomed both years but alas I lost the tags from that year so I don't know which one. 2013 was actually not a bad summer other than being too wet for some things. The summers of 2010, 2011, 2012 were the really bad ones.

This post was edited by davidrt28 on Fri, May 16, 14 at 11:09

    Bookmark     May 16, 2014 at 10:47AM
Sign Up to comment
© 2015 Houzz Inc. Houzz® The new way to design your home™