In 2007, San Antonio was covered with these flowers. It was a very wet year and the vision of the yellow ...Read Morefields was incredible, if you remember. I stopped in one of the fields and walked surrounded by multitude of butterflies and bees too busy to worry about me. I took so many photos of them. These last two years, flowers were scarce and so the beloved butterflies and bees. I am anxiously waiting for another wet year.
A note to add is that Native Americans from this area used this plant as dye.
Another common name for goldmane tickseed is dye flower. It is a native an annual wildflower that is found in Alabama, Arkansas, Connect...Read Moreicut, Florida, Georgia, Illinois, Louisiana, Mississippi, North Carolina, South Carolina and the eastern half of Texas growing on open ground in praires and meadows. The species thrives on disturbed land that is sandy and well drained. It is drought tolerant.
A dwarf, erect, multi-stemmed, bushy and compact coreopsis, It attains a height of between 8 to 29 inches and has small, deeply cut linear leaves. From April to August, masses of fragrant bright yellow flowers with reddish brown eyes are produced. It requires full sun, or close to it, in order to produce its maximum amount of blooms. It self-seeds and is easy to transplant if it shows up where one doesn't want it or deadhead it to keep it under control. It looks great in cultivated gardens that have well drined soil and it attracts the giant swallowtail butterfly.
Hellow neighbor!
In 2007, San Antonio was covered with these flowers. It was a very wet year and the vision of the yellow ...Read More
Another common name for goldmane tickseed is dye flower. It is a native an annual wildflower that is found in Alabama, Arkansas, Connect...Read More