The Echinacea “Purple Coneflower” is a beautiful perennial plant that blooms purple/violet flowers. It was once used as an ancient herbal remedy that some still use to this very day!
Echinacea "Purple Coneflower"
Common Names or AKA Names: | Coneflower |
Botanical Name: | Echinacea purpurea |
Family: | Asteraceae |
Hardiness Zones: | Zones 3 through 8 |
Native Area: | Eastern United States |
Bloom/Harvest Time: | Depending on the climate, it blooms throughout summer into autumn. |
Simply Beautiful!
Learn More About This Plant!
Native to eastern North America, they are hardy, drought-tolerant, long-blooming, and cultivated in an ever-widening range of colors. It’s hard to find a garden without at least one variety of the bloom. Best planted in early spring (after the final frost), Purple Coneflowers will germinate in about 10 – 15 days and produce leaves in three months but can take up to 1- 2 years to actually produce blooms.
Coneflower’s daisy-like booms are actually made up of several small flowers, with petals that are sterile to lure insects toward the many fertile flowers in the central disk or cone. These flowers are rich in nectar and very popular with both bees and butterflies. Hummingbirds also enjoy Coneflowers, and birds like finches eat (and spread) the seeds.
Growing Purple Coneflower from seeds is easy enough for the beginning gardener, while long-time gardeners delight in the ease of how to care for Coneflowers.
How to Care for Coneflowers:
Pruning Purple Coneflower:
Pruning Purple Coneflower is helpful, but not imperative. You can leave the plants standing throughout the winter months to feed the birds, and shearing them back in the spring will result in bushier plants that bloom longer into the season.
That being said, deadheading is the primary maintenance for Coneflowers. They are prolific bloomers, and deadheading (removing the dead flowers from living plants) will keep them in bloom all summer.
Flowers start blooming from the top of the stem, and each flower remains in bloom for several weeks. As the initial flower fades, more side shoots and buds will form along the stem. Keep the plants deadheaded, and you’ll keep getting more flowers. The process will also help prevent an overabundance of self-seeding from the plant.
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