Helenium bigelovii (Bigelow’s sneezeweed)

Description

Why choose native plants? Pacific Northwest native plants know how to live here and how to thrive here. They often need much less water and less fertilizer. They spread slowly and are not invasive. They support a wide diversity of wildlife. And best of all, they look great!

A fun, bright-yellow native coneflower, Bigelow’s sneezeweed flowers in mid to late summer and is attractive to a wide variety of pollinators. A common site in meadows, marshes and bogs, and along springs and streams at mid to high elevations in the Klamath-Siskiyou region, Bigelow’s sneezeweed typically grows to about three feet tall with many flowering stalks. It prefers full sun but is tolerant of a wide variety of soil types as long as sufficient moisture is available. Bigelow’s sneezeweed is named after J.M. Bigelow, a plant collector on the United States and Mexican Boundary Survey in the 1850s. Despite the common name this wildflower is not allergenic. It was originally used by some Native American tribes as a snuff, hence the common name. Bigelow’s sneezeweed is very adaptable to the irrigated garden environment and flowers after dead-heading. Image courtesy of SymbiOp.

Why choose native plants? Pacific Northwest native plants know how to live here and how to thrive here. They often need much less water and less fertilizer. They spread slowly and are not invasive. They support a wide diversity of wildlife. And best of all, they look great!

A fun, bright-yellow native coneflower, Bigelow’s sneezeweed flowers in mid to late summer and is attractive to a wide variety of pollinators. A common site in meadows, marshes and bogs, and along springs and streams at mid to high elevations in the Klamath-Siskiyou region, Bigelow’s sneezeweed typically grows to about three feet tall with many flowering stalks. It prefers full sun but is tolerant of a wide variety of soil types as long as sufficient moisture is available. Bigelow’s sneezeweed is named after J.M. Bigelow, a plant collector on the United States and Mexican Boundary Survey in the 1850s. Despite the common name this wildflower is not allergenic. It was originally used by some Native American tribes as a snuff, hence the common name. Bigelow’s sneezeweed is very adaptable to the irrigated garden environment and flowers after dead-heading. Image courtesy of SymbiOp.