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Black-Eyed Susan

$3.50

You want a wildflower that’s both beautiful and meaningful. Black-Eyed Susan lights up the landscape and carries with it a story of tradition, healing, and enduring beauty.
Planting guide: Planting depth: 1/8″ or 3mm. Seed spacing: 3″-4″ or 7.5-10cm. Spacing between rows: 10″-12″ or 25-30cm. Days to germination: 5-21. Days to maturity: 120.
Variety: 723

Sku:PH723
Categories: /

Maryland’s state flower, sometimes called Brown-Eyed Susan, Brown Betty, Poor-Land Daisy, Golden Jerusalem, Yellow Daisy, Yellow Ox-Eye Daisy, and English Bull’s Eye. Native to North America and one of the most popular wildflowers grown. They tend to blanket open fields with their golden-yellow beauty. There is a legend that says the name Black-Eyed Susan originated from an Old English Poem written by John Gay entitled ‘Sweet William’s Farewell to Black-Eyed Susan’. The poem was about how these wildflowers and the Sweet William plant bloom together beautifully. It has been told that the pre-colonial Native American tribes like the Ojibwa, Chippewa, Menominee, and Potawatomi tribes utilize Black-Eyed Susans as herbal medicine. They used this plant as an external wash against snake bites and used the infusion of the plant as a treatment for colds and worms, and the root sap for earaches.

attributes

Heirloom, Open Pollinated

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