In the yard, yellow flowers make everyone happy and bright. Here are ten famous yellow flowers that you might want to grow:
Sunflowers are a sign of summer because of their big, golden-yellow flower heads. They are simple to grow and get birds and bees to pollinate them.
1. Sunflower
People love marigolds for their bright yellow or orange flowers and tasty leaves. They are hardy annuals that can be used in flower beds, hedges, and pots to add color.
2. Marigold
Coreopsis, which is also called tickseed, has lots of yellow flowers that look like daisies on top of stiff stems. They are evergreen plants that can handle drought and bloom from spring to fall.
3. Coreopsis
Native to North America, Black-Eyed Susans are beautiful wildflowers with dark centers and bright yellow leaves. They can handle drought and butterflies love them, which makes them great for wildflower gardens.
4. Black-Eyed Susan
Daffodils are a standard spring bulb that blooms with trumpet-shaped flowers that are yellow and white. They grow back quickly and make gardens and landscapes look better.
5. Daffodil
In late summer and early fall, goldenrod grows tall spikes of tiny yellow flowers. Even though it has a bad reputation for making people allergic (which is usually due to ragweed), goldenrod is actually pollinated by insects and makes fields and borders look nice.
6. Goldenrod
There are different shades of daylilies, such as yellow, orange, and red. They are perennial plants that don't need much care and bloom a lot. They look great in borders, group plantings, or naturalized areas.
7. Daylily
Lantana is an annual plant that can handle heat. It has groups of small, brightly colored flowers that turn orange or red as they age. They are great for sunny borders or pots and bring in butterflies.
8. Lantana
Zinnias are easy-to-grow annuals that have bright flowers that look like daisies and come in many colors, including yellow. You can cut them for your cutting yard or use them to add color to beds and borders all summer long.
9. Zinnia
Permanent coneflowers can withstand drought. The center has large brownish-orange cones and vivid yellowish-orange petals. They beautify prairie gardens, borders, and wildflower meadows and attract pollinators.