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Best Perennial Flowers for Iowa Gardens

Perennials are the workhorses of Iowa gardens. They come back year after year, they need less fussing than annuals, and they give you reliable color from spring through fall. For homeowners in Cedar Falls who want a garden that fills in and gets better every season, perennials are the way to go. The key is choosing varieties that handle our specific conditions: hot humid summers, cold winters, heavy clay soil, and the occasional drought. Some plants thrive in that mix, and some do not. Stick with the proven performers and you will have a garden that delivers without constant replacement.

Coneflower, or Echinacea, is about as close to a perfect perennial as you can get for Iowa. It is native to the prairie, so it is built for our weather. It blooms from June all the way through September, sending up purple, pink, or white flowers that attract butterflies and bees all season. It is drought-tolerant once established, which matters during those July and August dry spells. It does not need staking or deadheading to keep blooming. And it spreads nicely without being aggressive. Plant a drift of coneflowers in a sunny bed and you will have color for months with almost no work. That is hard to beat.

Daylilies are another Iowa staple, and for good reason. They grow in almost any soil, from sandy to heavy clay. They bloom in waves through summer, with each flower lasting a day but new ones opening continuously. They handle full sun and partial shade. They are not fussy about fertilizer or watering. And they come in every color from pale yellow to deep burgundy. The older varieties like Stella de Oro bloom repeatedly from spring through fall. Daylilies are forgiving plants. If you put them in the wrong spot, you can dig them up and move them and they barely notice. That kind of resilience matters in an Iowa garden.

Hostas are the answer for shade. If you have a north-facing foundation bed or a spot under a mature tree where grass will not grow, hostas are your plant. They come in sizes from miniature varieties that stay under 6 inches to giants that spread 4 feet wide. Leaf colors range from deep green to chartreuse to blue-gray, with endless combinations of variegation. Hostas are not native, but they perform well in Iowa with consistent moisture. The one thing they cannot handle is full sun. In direct sun, the leaves burn and bleach out. Give them shade and some water, and they will thrive for decades.

Black-eyed Susan is another native that deserves a spot in every Iowa garden. It blooms from midsummer through fall with bright yellow flowers and dark centers. It handles heat, humidity, and drought with no complaints. It self-seeds readily, so you get new plants popping up in the right places each year. If it spreads too much, it is easy to pull. Black-eyed Susan pairs beautifully with coneflower and ornamental grasses for a natural-looking prairie garden. It is also a pollinator magnet. The bees and butterflies will find it within days of the first flower opening.

We plant perennials for homeowners all over Cedar Falls and the Cedar Valley. Whether you want a full perennial garden designed from scratch or just need to fill in some bare spots in existing beds, we can help. We know which varieties perform best in Black Hawk County soils and which ones will let you down. Give us a call and we will put together a planting plan that gives you color from spring through fall, year after year. Your garden should get better every season, and with the right perennials in the right places, it will.

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