We moved over the winter and I was so pleasantly surprised to see this show up in our natural wet woodlands area. They’re so beautiful! It’s surrounded by Goldenrod in both areas and are always busy with bees and Tiger Swallowtails! I’m hoping for Monarchs soon.
Ironweed is ridiculously hearty. We're in southern Appalachia on land with so many negatives for growth (sloped, acidic clay, moderate shade, rooty shallow soil, tons of deer, etc.). There's only 4 plants that thrive in our yard with no human intervention: #1 japanese stiltgrass, #2- fireweed, #3- ragwort, and #4- ironweed.
We had difficulty growing these from seed too but this year we put a whole packet of seeds in water in a small container with a lid, in the fridge for 2 months and it was a success.
Ha, I’m here because I found it by the road on a drive, picked it, brought it home and asked a Facebook homesteading group to identify it so I could figure out if I can keep my new “pet” or not.😂
I live in Ohio and there's sooooo much behind my house.. this one, then an almost sunflower looking ones, tons of fleabane aster and vervain and just TONS of plants that are beneficial.. discovering that there's soooo many wild edibles and herbs.. I was always taught weeds are bad because they're toxic. Kills me how many useful plants I've destroyed... subscribed!
As noted in Hawke's (2020) "A Comparative Evaluation of Ironweeds (Vernonia spp.)," ironweed can be very prone to powdery mildew. Like Hawke, I have found that the susceptibility for powdery mildew can vary considerably between individual specimens and different species.
Mine is about 12 feet tall already…it’s just crazy, with this grow rate I won’t be able to see flowers up there 😅 thinking about topping it off at this point
I have 2 of these ironweed. They’re about 4’ tall in garden soil, starting to lean and their purple blooms look like will all fade in early September. Idk whether to cut them back or just leave them be in my pollinator garden until winter. Any suggestions? Great video and plant.
Just planted 4 NY Ironweeds at back or my large bed, next to Joe Pye. I have several self-seeded Golden Rods coming in, also not yet blooming. Thinking of transplanting in front of Ironweed. How tall does Golden Rod get? Thanks!
They can get pretty tall depending on the species. Canadian can get over 5 ft. There are some others like showy goldenrod that stays closer to 3 ft. You can head them back in early spring to keep them shorter.
Which season have you had your best luck with transplanting? I'm in N. Georgia & know a source & could give it a good home. Makes me cry to see the county cut these down in full bloom 😔
I'd have to say I find this plant disappointing as far as pollinator attracting goes-- hardly anything comes to the flowers, just a couple of carpenter bees, and fairly short bloom time. My Showy Goldenrod is the opposite- tons of bees of all types are coming to it as I write this mid-September. I'm definitely going to explore more Goldenrods for my plantings.
I love Goldenrods and have about 4 species. As far as the ironweed goes, I get a lot of action and the one featured in my video is still blooming. Thanks for your feedback and keep planting! 😀
We moved over the winter and I was so pleasantly surprised to see this show up in our natural wet woodlands area. They’re so beautiful! It’s surrounded by Goldenrod in both areas and are always busy with bees and Tiger Swallowtails! I’m hoping for Monarchs soon.
Thanks for the comment. Goldenrod and Ironweed are two of my favorites for sure!
Ironweed is ridiculously hearty. We're in southern Appalachia on land with so many negatives for growth (sloped, acidic clay, moderate shade, rooty shallow soil, tons of deer, etc.). There's only 4 plants that thrive in our yard with no human intervention: #1 japanese stiltgrass, #2- fireweed, #3- ragwort, and #4- ironweed.
I love my Ironweed.
Ironweeds flowers are THE BEST shade of purple.
My property is covered with it.
They look great with goldenrod too. Thanks for the comment
We had difficulty growing these from seed too but this year we put a whole packet of seeds in water in a small container with a lid, in the fridge for 2 months and it was a success.
That's great! Thanks for the comment.
I just saw this this plant growing wild near my home. I inspected it and took pictures. I want to add this to my pollinater bed.
Thanks for the comment. I love mine!
Ha, I’m here because I found it by the road on a drive, picked it, brought it home and asked a Facebook homesteading group to identify it so I could figure out if I can keep my new “pet” or not.😂
thanks, helped me to identify vernonia in a local prairie planting in south west Ontario, appreciate your effort!
Thanks. My pleasure.
perfect herb for rain gardens.
I live in Ohio and there's sooooo much behind my house.. this one, then an almost sunflower looking ones, tons of fleabane aster and vervain and just TONS of plants that are beneficial.. discovering that there's soooo many wild edibles and herbs.. I was always taught weeds are bad because they're toxic. Kills me how many useful plants I've destroyed... subscribed!
Thanks! It's a wonderful journey you're on now. I still excited when I find a new native plant and learn about it's usefulness to wildlife and people.
leaf cutter bees enjoy this plant
As noted in Hawke's (2020) "A Comparative Evaluation of Ironweeds (Vernonia spp.)," ironweed can be very prone to powdery mildew. Like Hawke, I have found that the susceptibility for powdery mildew can vary considerably between individual specimens and different species.
Thanks for the comment. I haven't encountered powdery mildew on any of mine so far.
Mine is about 12 feet tall already…it’s just crazy, with this grow rate I won’t be able to see flowers up there 😅 thinking about topping it off at this point
Thanks for the comment. Topping it off is always an option. I might do top a couple of mine off too...
I have 2 of these ironweed. They’re about 4’ tall in garden soil, starting to lean and their purple blooms look like will all fade in early September. Idk whether to cut them back or just leave them be in my pollinator garden until winter. Any suggestions? Great video and plant.
Thanks for the comment. You could try staking them until they are finished flowering then cut them back. Just a thought.
Just planted 4 NY Ironweeds at back or my large bed, next to Joe Pye. I have several self-seeded Golden Rods coming in, also not yet blooming. Thinking of transplanting in front of Ironweed. How tall does Golden Rod get? Thanks!
They can get pretty tall depending on the species. Canadian can get over 5 ft. There are some others like showy goldenrod that stays closer to 3 ft. You can head them back in early spring to keep them shorter.
Which season have you had your best luck with transplanting? I'm in N. Georgia & know a source & could give it a good home. Makes me cry to see the county cut these down in full bloom 😔
Thanks for the comment. I love transplanting in Fall best. I hate seeing them get cut down too.
@@Jem544 post bloom you whack & dig?
@@katiekane5247 yea. Try to get as much root as you can. Good luck 🤞
@@Jem544 thank you!
I'd have to say I find this plant disappointing as far as pollinator attracting goes-- hardly anything comes to the flowers, just a couple of carpenter bees, and fairly short bloom time. My Showy Goldenrod is the opposite- tons of bees of all types are coming to it as I write this mid-September. I'm definitely going to explore more Goldenrods for my plantings.
I love Goldenrods and have about 4 species. As far as the ironweed goes, I get a lot of action and the one featured in my video is still blooming. Thanks for your feedback and keep planting! 😀
The butterflies, bees, and mantises love vernonia gigantea here in eKY.