I live in South Dakota, and they grow them out here. I watched a farm show, and I think they were growing a lot of them in North Dakota, too. Of course, they grow lots of sunflowers in Kansas. Main crops in these places are corn, soy, and wheat. Sunflowers are a profitable crop so farmers rotate them in with their main crops. I think they grow a few sunflowers in a whole lot of states, but they are mostly out on the Plains.
Sunflowers are grown next to highways and in deserts. They can also be grown in gardens though if you use regular soil. Rich soil won't work. To grow, sunflowers need lots and lots of sunlight and wide-open spaces.
Sunflowers can be found in every state; they are a popular flower and adapt readily to a range of weather conditions. Natively, various species are found from Texas to as far north as North Dakota, and from California to Pennsylvania.
Various species of sunflowers can be found naturally throughout most of North and Central America.
sunflowers grow in America typically in warm places
North and South Dakota produce almost 90% of all US sunflower seeds. North Dakota out performs South Dakota by around 50%.
Sunflowers can be grown in all states. Commercially, they are mainly grown in mid-western states, such as Kansas, Colorado, and South Dakota.
noooooooooooob blahblahblah
ANYWHERE!! (I had one in my garden (UK))
Nebraska
Washington.
Georgia.
California
Iowa
Iowa
Ukraine grows the most sunflowers, primarily to use and export the seeds. In second place is Russia. In 2014, the US was 11th among sunflower growers.
If it's a state in the US, i think it would be Hawaii
California is the largest plum-producing state.
Louisiana
In the US, California is famous for its grapes.
California California