- The right location is crucial
- How to properly care for black-eyed Susanne
- Pinch off faded flowers
- tips and tricks
Black-eyed Susanne is a bit picky about her location. If the space is not optimal, only a few or no flowers will form. Mistakes in care can also be responsible for the lack of flowers. What you can do if Black-eyed Susan just won't bloom.

The right location is crucial
- Sunny
- Airy
- Warm
- sheltered from the wind
Black-eyed Susanne doesn't like wind, rain and cold. Make sure the plant is as sunny as possible. She prefers light penumbra to a place that is too cold and draughty.
Keep your distance from other plants so that the air can circulate well. However, the place must not be windy under any circumstances, because the plant, which comes from Africa, does not tolerate that at all.
If the Black-eyed Susan doesn't produce any flowers, move it to a different location. If you have not grown the climbing plant before, you should initially only keep it in a pot until you have found an ideal location.
How to properly care for black-eyed Susanne
The soil must never dry out completely. Waterlogging, however, makes black-eyed Susanne lazy. Water moderately but regularly.
Make sure that the garden soil or potting soil is permeable. When kept in a pot, there must be a large drainage hole. Place a layer of drainage at the bottom of the pot to keep Black-eyed Susan's roots out of the water.
In order to develop many flowers, the climbing plant needs a lot of nutrients. Fertilize regularly. Fertilize once or twice a month during the flowering period.
Pinch off faded flowers
If you do not remove the faded flowers, Black-eyed Susan will stop flowering after a while.
Cut faded flowers continuously to stimulate flower growth.
You should only leave a few flowers if you want to collect seeds from your black-eyed susan. This is where the seeds mature that you can sow next year.
tips and tricks
If the black-eyed Susan gets yellow or discolored leaves, spider mites are usually to blame. You should treat the infestation as soon as possible so that the plant can recover from it.