Gardening Ideas Gardening Flowers Perennial Flowers How To Grow And Care For Coneflower If you want a plant that will bloom year after year in your Southern garden, check out this happy-growing perennial. By Steve Bender Steve Bender Steve Bender, also known as The Grumpy Gardener, is an award-winning author, editor, columnist, and speaker with nearly 40 years experience as Garden Editor, Senior Writer, and Editor-at-Large for Southern Living. Southern Living's editorial guidelines Updated on July 10, 2024 Fact checked by Khara Scheppmann Fact checked by Khara Scheppmann Khara Scheppmann has 12 years of marketing and advertising experience, including proofreading and fact-checking. She previously worked at one of the largest advertising agencies in the southwest. brand's fact checking process In This Article View All In This Article Plant Attributes Coneflower Care Types of Coneflower Pruning How to Get Coneflower to Bloom Close Photo: Southern Living/Adrienne Legault The coneflower is native to North America and is generally known as a prairie plant, growing with little fuss and brightening beds and borders in Southern gardens. These sun-loving perennials form large clumps of long-stemmed, very showy flowers with drooping to horizontal rays and a beehive-like central cone. The plants bloom over a long period in summer and may continue sporadically until frost. Deadheading will prolong the bloom season. (In mild winter climates, they have been known to start blooming in spring.) When left in place, the coneflower’s bristly seed heads hang on into winter, giving finches a natural food source. To make coneflowers last, be sure to plant where drainage is good. Plant Attributes Common Name Coneflower Botanical Name Echinacea purpurea Family Asteraceae Plant Type Perennials, biennials Mature Size 3–4 ft. tall, 1–2 ft. wide Sun Exposure Full sun, partial shade Soil Type Well-drained Clay, High Organic Matter,Loam (Silt), Sand, Soil pH Neutral (6.0-8.0) Bloom Time Summer Flower Color White, pink, and purple Hardiness Zones USDA Zones 3-8 Native Area North America Southern Living/Adrienne Legault Coneflower Care Coneflowers grow well and without much care. They generally do not need staking. They perform well in summer heat and tolerate drought. Clumps spread slowly, becoming crowded after three or four years. Fleshy rootstocks can be difficult to separate; divide carefully, making sure that each division has a shoot and roots. Plantings can also be increased by taking root cuttings, seeding, or transplanting self-sown seedlings. Southern Living/Adrienne Legault Light Coneflower needs a minimum of six hours of full sunlight every day. While they tolerate part shade, it will affect how much the plant flowers. Give coneflower sunshine and it will repay you with endless summer blooms. Soil Although coneflower can grow in a variety of soils, they grow best in neutral soil. Coneflower doesn’t like wet soil, so if the soil tends to be too heavy, add some compost when planting to improve drainage. Water Even though many think of coneflower as a tough and tolerant grower, the plant will grow even better if you keep a watering schedule. Once the plants are established, try to give them about an inch of water every week through their first year. Keep your eye on them during droughts. They might require more. Temperature and Humidity Coneflowers prefer hot, dry climates but are humidity and salt-tolerant. Fertilizer Give your coneflower plants a top dressing of compost each spring to give the plant the nutrition it will need to grow well and produce lots of blooms. Southern Living/Adrienne Legault Types of Coneflower E. angustifolia. Narrow-Leaf Coneflower. USDA 3-8. Native to the central U.S. The prairie wildflower is one to two feet high, and 18 inches wide. Flowers to three to six inches wide, with pink-to-rosy purple rays drooping from a purple-brown cone. Narrow, bristly leaves grow to six inches long.E. hybrids. Zones US, MS, LS, CS; USDA 6-9. Complex crosses have produced hybrid coneflowers that are popular for their vigor and extended color range. Plants in the Big Sky series grow 2–3 ft. high and 2 ft. wide; choices include butter-yellow ‘Sunrise’, bright orange ‘Sunset’, and reddish orange ‘Sundown’ (‘Evan Saul’). ‘Cheyenne Spirit’ first-year flowering, heavily blooming, drought tolerant, grows to 2 ft. ‘Adam Saul’ (‘Crazy Pink’) is one of the heaviest bloomers, topping out at only 2 ft. tall and wide. ‘Flame Thrower’ grows 2 1⁄2-3 ft. tall and has bright yellow petals flushed with orange near the cone. Heavy bloomer. ‘Green Envy’, 2–3 ft. high, has fragrant, lime-green blooms that pick up magenta-purple near the cone as they age. The green cone also fades to purple. ‘Hot Papaya’ is doubled with a pompon rather than a cone and blooms in mango-red. ‘Mango Meadowbrite’ grows 2–3 ft. high and wide; orange-yellow petals surround orange-brown centers. ‘Orange Meadowbrite’ (‘Art’s Pride’) grows about the same size, bears reddish-orange flowers. ‘Pixie Meadowbrite’ grows only about 11⁄2 ft. tall and a bit wider, with pink, nondrooping petals surrounding a yellow-brown center. The Sombrero series grows to 2 ft. and has bold colors on early-blooming, heat-tolerant plants. ‘Tomato Soup’ has bright red flowers up to 6 in. wide on 2-ft.-high plants. ‘Tiki Torch’ has bright orange-to-rose blooms on a 2- to 2 1⁄2-ft.-tall plant.E. paradoxa. Yellow Coneflower. USDA 3-9. Native to the central U.S., from Missouri south to Texas. It grows to three feet high, and 18 inches wide. Drooping, yellow to orange-yellow rays surround a brown cone; flowers are about six inches long. Smooth, lance-shaped leaves grow to eight inches long. Hybrids involving this and E. purpurea have produced many new colors.E. purpurea. PURPLE CONEFLOWER. Zones US, MS, LS, CS; USDA 6-9. Native to central and eastern North America. Coarse, stiff plant to 4–5 ft. tall, about 2 ft. wide, with bristly, oblong leaves 3–8 in. long. Blossoms reach 2–3 in. wide, with drooping rosy purple rays and an orange-brown central cone. Many fine selections are available. ‘Coconut Lime’ has a double flower, with a single row of large white petals surrounding a tuft of smaller light green petals around the cone. Grows to 2–3 ft. high. ‘Doubledecker’ (‘Doppelganger’), another 2-footer, has something extra: a second set of pink petals emerging from the top of the cone. ‘Fragrant Angel’ grows 2–21⁄2 ft. high with sweetly scented white flowers. ‘Kim’s Knee High’ grows 1 1⁄2–2 ft. high and has clear pink flowers. ‘Magnus’ grows 3–4 ft. tall and has deep purplish pink, orange-centered flowers to 7 in. wide. ‘Pink Poodle’ produces fully double pink flowers that resemble zinnias. ‘Rubinstern’ (‘Ruby Star’) grows 2–3 ft. high with carmine-red, non-drooping rays. Both ‘White Lustre’ (21⁄2 ft. high) and ‘White Swan’ (1 1⁄2–2 ft. high) have white rays and orange-yellow cones. ‘PowWow Wildberry’ grows 1 1⁄2 -2 ft. tall with pink-purple flowers that bloom heavily the first year.E. tennesseensis. Tennessee Coneflower. USDA 5-6. Similar to E. purpurea, but rays are horizontal rather than drooping, and cones are greenish pink. Stems to 24 inches tall. Forms a low, casual mound. This beautiful coneflower is rare and was once on the List of Endangered and Threatened Plants but was removed in 2011. Pruning To keep the coneflower in full bloom, pinch off any dead flowers during the growing season. Deadheading spent blooms will encourage the plant to send up more flowers. At the end of the growing season, you can leave the remaining flowers, their seeds will feed the birds through the winter. How to Get Coneflower to Bloom Plant coneflower in the spring to give the plant months of growing before going into the winter. Use on the outskirts of the garden or in wide borders with other robust perennials such as Shasta daisy (Leucanthemum x superbum), sunflower (Helianthus), Michaelmas daisy (Symphyotrichum novi-belgii). Coneflower is seldom bothered by deer. Southern Living/Adrienne Legault Was this page helpful? Thanks for your feedback! Tell us why! Other Submit Sources Southern Living is committed to using high-quality, reputable sources to support the facts in our articles. Read our editorial guidelines to learn more about how we fact check our content for accuracy. Federal Register. Endangered and threatened wildlife and plants; removal of echinacea tennesseensis (Tennessee purple coneflower) from the federal list of endangered and threatened plants. 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