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Cup Plant is so named because its opposite leaves fuse at the stem to form a cup-like shape that holds water, attracting birds and other small fauna all season long. Its sturdy, upright stems are hairless and square (unique amongsilphiums), and unbranched until the top, where multiple floral stalks bear bright yellow, 3in sunflower-like flowers. Pollinators visit these blooms all summer long and then goldfinches and other songbirds flock to eat the seeds in the fall. The only silphium that thrives in wet soil, it will be shorter in drier soils. Their especially long taproot makes them long-lived and drought-resistant onceestablished, but also uninterested in being transplanted. Spreads via rhizome such that it is considered aggressive and should be reserved for large garden spaces.
Sun: Full, Partial
Soil: Medium-Wet, Medium
Bloom Time: July, August, September
Color: Yellow
Height: 8 ft