3 Green Jewel Echinacea Plants | Live Green Coneflower Starters | Pollinator Perennial | Cut Flowers | Full Sun | Hardy
3 Green Jewel Echinacea Plants | Live Green Coneflower Starters | Pollinator Perennial | Cut Flowers | Full Sun | Hardy
Couldn't load pickup availability
Add a unique splash of color to your garden with 3 Green Jewel Echinacea Starter Perennial Plants. Echinacea purpurea 'Green Jewel' is an award-winning coneflower featuring striking lime-green blooms that stand out in flower beds, pollinator gardens, and fresh-cut arrangements.
These healthy starter plants are just coming out of dormancy and are ready to establish quickly in your garden. Blooming from summer into fall, Green Jewel attracts butterflies, bees, and other beneficial pollinators while offering excellent drought tolerance once established. Its unusual green flowers make it a favorite for cottage gardens, prairie plantings, and modern landscape designs.
Key Features
- Botanical Name: Echinacea purpurea 'Green Jewel'
- Common Name: Green Jewel Coneflower
- Plant Type: Herbaceous Perennial
- Flower Color: Lime Green
- Foliage Color: Green
- Quantity: 3 Live Starter Plants
- Plant Condition: Healthy starter plants; emerging from dormancy
- Mature Height: 18–24 inches
- Spread: 18–24 inches
- Bloom Season: Summer through Early Fall
- Growth Habit: Upright, Clumping
- Light Requirements: Full Sun
- Water Needs: Low to Moderate
- USDA Hardiness Zones: 3–9
Why You'll Love It
- Unique lime-green blooms
- Excellent cut flower variety
- Attracts butterflies, bees, and other pollinators
- Long blooming season
- Drought tolerant once established
- Deer resistant
- Easy to grow and low maintenance
- Returns larger every year
Perfect For
- Pollinator gardens
- Cottage gardens
- Prairie gardens
- Cut flower gardens
- Sunny borders
- Native landscapes
- Mixed perennial beds
- Wildlife gardens
- Modern garden designs
Care Instructions
Plant in well-drained soil in full sun for the best flowering. Water regularly during the first growing season to establish roots, then reduce watering once established. Deadhead spent flowers for additional blooms or leave seed heads through fall to feed birds. Cut back old stems in late winter or early spring.
Share
