Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

2023 to see a Gold Rush for rudbeckia

- NORMAN WINTER

Next year will be a horticultu­ral occurrence or phenomenon I don’t ever remember happening. It is going to be like the gold rush, except this time to get an award-winning plant. We can credit Brent Horvath, owner of Intrinsic Perennial Gardens, with this invention that has everyone excited. It is known as the American Gold Rush rudbeckia.

Growers and industry alike are celebratin­g the first rudbeckia resistant to Septoria leaf spot. You may not have ever paid attention to the leaves of your Rudbeckia fulgida selections or hybrids, but the nursery industry has, and they are helping drive this hybrid to the top of the recommende­d list.

This is where the chain of events has mesmerized me. First, American Gold Rush was awarded the All-American Selections Herbaceous Perennial Winner in 2020. Many of us were unaware of a cooperativ­e venture with the Perennial Plant Associatio­n.

In 2022, Proven Winners added this to their perennial lineup, which added great impetus in getting it into gardener’s hands across the country. Then the Perennial

Plant Associatio­n further strengthen­ed the effort by announcing it as its 2023 Perennial Plant of the Year. But it all comes to a crescendo as the National Garden Bureau has designated 2023 as the Year of the Rudbeckia.

These national honors certainly go hand in hand with university trials where high numbers were revealed. But the press from the Missouri Botanical Garden and the Chicago Botanical Garden, where perennials are given a little more time to, as we say, perenniali­ze, speaks volumes.

This is the perennial rudbeckia you should choose.

Whether it is a perennial garden, modern flower border, habitat garden and the meadow look you have always dreamed about, the American Gold Rush is for you. This hybrid packed with native DNA will bloom not only to reveal its golden yellow beauty, but to the delight of bees and butterflie­s, too.

My favorite neighborho­od in Columbus, Ga., was like a summer parade of visitors driving by gawking at the hundreds of rudbeckias, but as summer was coming to an end, the foliage and stems turned black and ugly. This wasn’t fatal, but simply points out what many other gardeners have experience­d. America Gold Rush is different; the hairs on the leaves and stems that give a silvery cast in the sun also give protection from this dreaded fungus.

The American Gold Rush has a different habit, too, that you will quickly notice. The plants reach up to 27 inches tall with a wider spread to 40 inches. In other words, it makes a real show. While it brings in bees and butterflie­s, patient gardeners will notice favorite songbirds come to enjoy the delicacy of maturing seeds.

This rudbeckia was made for our native soils. As long as your soil is well-drained, you don’t have to worry about adding copious amounts of amendments or trying to modify pH as alkalinity and acidity are typically not a problem. Choose a site with plenty of sun. American Gold Rush is recommende­d for zones 4-9, so most of the country can relish in its beauty. Space your plants at 36 to 40 inches to allow for the welcomed spread. In late winter or very early spring, cut back like you do other perennials. (Arkansas is in zones 6-8.)

You can’t beat creating a prairie or meadow look combining with native grasses. The Garden Guy, however, will be combining his with plants in the pollinator garden like Color Coded echinacea, Uplugged So Blue salvia,

Meant to Bee Queen Nectarine agastache and Upscale Red Velvet monarda.

 ?? (Courtesy of All-American Selections/TNS) ?? American Gold Rush rudbeckia, the 2023 Perennial Plant of the Year, is disease resistant and will reach about 27-inches tall with a spread out to 40-inches.
(Courtesy of All-American Selections/TNS) American Gold Rush rudbeckia, the 2023 Perennial Plant of the Year, is disease resistant and will reach about 27-inches tall with a spread out to 40-inches.
 ?? (Norman Winter via TNS) ?? American Gold Rush will be loved by bees and butterflie­s like this Gray Hairstreak and seeds left to mature will be enjoyed by visiting songbirds.
(Norman Winter via TNS) American Gold Rush will be loved by bees and butterflie­s like this Gray Hairstreak and seeds left to mature will be enjoyed by visiting songbirds.

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