- Home
- Prairie Partners
- Field Guide
- Introduction
- Map
- Heritage
- Local Prairie
- Geology
- Ojata
- First Peoples
- Voices
-
Species
>
- Ferruginous Hawk
- Marbled Godwit
- Short-eared Owl
- Western Meadowlark
- Snowy Owl
- Greater Prairie Chicken
- Le Conte's Sparrow
- Upland Sandpiper
- Wilson's Phalarope
- Yellow Rail
- Northern Pintail
- White Prairie Aster
- Common Bladderwort
- Pasque Flower
- Prairie Coneflower
- Maximilian Sunflower
- Big Bluestem
- Wild Prairie Rose
- Wild Bergamot
- Black-eyed Susan
- Canada Wild Rye
- Tiger Salamander
- Common green darner
- Prairie Is
- Pioneers
- Prairie Heroes
- Photo Gallery
- Speaking of Prairie
- Links
- Contact Us
Black-eyed Susan
The black-eyed Susan is a flower so beloved that gardeners smitten with its bold flowers have introduced it across most of North America, making its blossoms among our most recognized. The prairies of the plains, however, are its native home. The black-eyed Susan grows from one-foot to three-feet tall and has a coarse, rough stem. Its flowers will remind you of a daisy: yellow petals and a brown central cone.
Home | Partners | Field Guide | Heroes | Gallery | Links | Contact Us
Grand Forks County Prairie Partners - 2011 - All Rights Reserved