The plume poppy, Shasta daisy, and yellow marguerite will besurrounded by a large number of young plants, which spread out andsurround the parent plant, with the result that a number of inferiorplants occupy the space which should be occupied by only a few fine,thrifty specimens, providing the parent plants are not divided andtransplanted each year. With the yellow marguerite especially, it ismuch better to discard the old roots and to preserve in the dividing onlythose roots which are the result of the previous year's development asoffshoots from the parent plant. Many times the seedlings thatspring up around these plants are equally as preferable if trans-planted and given ample space to develop normally.