4 Mixed Echinacea Coneflower Plants | Live Perennial Starter Plants | Pollinator Friendly | Ready to Plant | Drought Tolerant
4 Mixed Echinacea Coneflower Plants | Live Perennial Starter Plants | Pollinator Friendly | Ready to Plant | Drought Tolerant
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Fill your garden with vibrant color and beneficial pollinators with 4 Mixed Echinacea Coneflower Starter Plants. These hardy perennial favorites produce beautiful daisy-like blooms in a mix of colorful varieties, creating a stunning display from summer through fall.
Echinacea (Echinacea spp.) is prized for its long bloom season, drought tolerance, and ability to attract butterflies, bees, and other pollinators while resisting deer. These healthy starter plants establish quickly and return bigger and better each year, making them an excellent addition to pollinator gardens, cottage gardens, prairie landscapes, and perennial borders.
Key Features
- Botanical Name: Echinacea spp.
- Common Name: Mixed Coneflower
- Plant Type: Herbaceous Perennial
- Flower Colors: Mixed Assorted Colors
- Quantity: 4 Live Starter Plants
- Plant Condition: Healthy starter plants; growth stage varies by season
- Mature Height: 24–36 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
- Beautiful assortment of colorful blooms
- Long flowering season
- Fragrant flowers
- Attracts butterflies, bees, and hummingbirds
- Drought tolerant once established
- Deer resistant
- Easy to grow and low maintenance
- Returns year after year
Perfect For
- Pollinator gardens
- Butterfly gardens
- Cottage gardens
- Prairie gardens
- Wildflower gardens
- Sunny borders
- Cut flower gardens
- Native landscapes
- Mixed perennial beds
Care Instructions
Plant in well-drained soil in full sun for the best flowering. Water regularly during establishment, then only during prolonged dry periods. Deadhead spent blooms to encourage continued flowering, or leave seed heads through fall to feed birds. Cut back old growth in late winter or early spring.
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