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MagazineJuly 6, 2026 · 4 min read

Prairie perennials for drought: climate-proof and easy-care

Prairie perennials like coneflower and purple coneflower defy heat and drought. How to plant them poor, sunny and stake-free the right way.

The Gartenkern team
Garden & editorial
Rosa Purpursonnenhut mit orangebraunem Kegel
Der Purpursonnenhut hält Trockenheit stand und blüht bis in den Herbst. · Foto: Krzysztof Golik, CC BY-SA 4.0 (via Wikimedia Commons)
Contents

Dry, hot summers put classic perennial beds under strain. Whoever does not want to water constantly best looks to where drought is normal: the North American prairie. The perennials from there are built exactly for these conditions and are growing ever more popular here because they suit the climate.

Prairie perennials like coneflower, purple coneflower and blazing star are easy-care, sturdy and an important forage for insects. The catch: they want it poor and dry, not well-meant fertilised. This article shows you how to set them correctly.

Poor is better than rich

The most common mistake with prairie perennials is well-meant: you pamper them with compost and fertiliser. The result is tall, soft shoots that flop over in the first summer storm, and fewer flowers. Prairie perennials want it lean.

On heavy, moist soil it is best to work in sand or fine grit to make it more free-draining. A poor, well-drained spot brings compact, sturdy plants that stay upright on their own. How to weave prairie perennials into a well-planned bed is in Planning a perennial bed.

Bright yellow black-eyed Susan with a black centre
The common coneflower (Rudbeckia) is a robust prairie partner: sun-hungry, sturdy, insect-friendly.· Photo: Dcoetzee, CC0

The first year decides

Even drought-tolerant perennials are not dry from the start. In the first year the roots must first grow deep. So the rule is: water regularly in the planting year, then ever more sparingly.

Once the taproot is established, the perennial draws its water from deeper layers and shrugs off dry spells. Whoever stops watering already in the first year loses the plants before they could even build up their drought tolerance.

Proven prairie perennials for sunny beds

  • Purple coneflower

    Echinacea purpurea blooms from week 27 into autumn, tolerates drought well and is a magnet for butterflies and bees.

  • Coneflower

    Rudbeckia glows yellow into October, is extremely robust and forms dense, sturdy clumps over the years.

  • Blazing star

    Liatris spicata brings vertical lines into the bed with its violet spikes and unusually opens from top to bottom.

  • Ornamental grasses as partners

    Grasses like switchgrass and feather grass tie the flowers into a prairie picture and stay as structure through winter too.

Poor not rich, water in the first year, then almost never. Whoever sets prairie perennials lean and sunny has a bed that survives even hot summers without a watering can.

The core rule for prairie perennials

Frequently asked questions

Which perennials tolerate heat and drought?

Prairie perennials from North America like purple coneflower, coneflower, blazing star and bee balm are especially drought-tolerant. Mediterranean classics like lavender and steppe grasses suit them. Important is a poor, free-draining soil.

Do I have to water prairie perennials?

In the first year yes, regularly, until the roots have grown deep. Afterwards barely, because the taproots draw water from deeper soil layers. Only in extreme, long drought does occasional watering help.

Why do my prairie perennials flop over?

Usually because the soil is too rich or too moist. On well-fertilised soil they push soft, long shoots that have no support. A poor, free-draining spot brings compact, sturdy plants entirely without stakes.

When do I plant prairie perennials?

Best in spring, weeks 15 to 20, once the soil has warmed. Then the perennials have the whole season to root before the first winter. Autumn planting is also possible in mild regions.

Are prairie perennials hardy?

Most common species are well hardy. They are more sensitive to winter wet than to frost. A free-draining soil and left-standing seed heads bring them reliably through winter.

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