How to grow echinaceas

By Val Bourne

Alphabet I I would love to grow cone flowers or echinaceas. Are they difficult, asks a reader.
Echinacea double deckerEchinacea double decker

Echinaceas prefer fertile soil although you can improve your soil by adding garden compost when planting. You can also mulch after damp weather in early summer to retain moisture if your garden tends to be dry. Like many North American prairie plants (including heleniums) their ideal is a cold winter followed by a warm spring. They happily tolerate hot summers so the past ten months have been ideal for them. However echinaceas do not enjoy mild, wet winters so it’s best to plant in spring, or at least by early September, so that any newly-planted ones can develop a root system.

Once established they are long-lived, valuable garden plants. Bees and butterflies adore them and they peak in August and carry on until late autumn eventually forming an enduring seedhead for winter. The bronzed cone in the middle allows them to be mixed with many colours including yellow and orange. They are stiff-stemmed and self-supporting. In recent years many hybrid varieties have appeared in sunset shades, green and pink. However they are easily raised from seed too and usually flower in their first year if planted by March. 'White Swan', 'Magnus' (a large pink) and the aptly named 'Double Decker' are available from Thompson & Morgan.

There are nine species all found in central and eastern North America. Although they all have the distinctive cone surrounded by ray petals, they vary in stature and stance. Echinacea pallida has drooping, ribbon-like pink petals and it looks quite fragile and delicate in a border. E. paradoxa has narrow yellow petals and E. purpurea (the most commonly and easily grown of the three) is bolder with flat, level flowers mostly in pink, but also in white.

New breeding

For many years echinaceas only came in white or strong pink, but in recent years plant breeders have produced a series of hybrid varieties in soft shades of orange and lime-green. This new range of colours has broadened their appeal and some of the yellows and greens are scented. Breeders have also developed doubles although these are less pleasing in the garden setting than the singles. These have all proved hardy and the twenty or so I grow all came through the arctic conditions of last winter. Hybrids tend to be more vigorous than species, but some of the tap-rooted ones (taking after E. paradoxa) succumb in wet winters.

Excellent new echinaceas

The Big Sky Series - hybrids of E. paradoxa and E. purpurea (bred by Saul Nurseries of Atlanta in Georgia)

This soft orange-yellow echinacea is a magnificent addition to any garden and it’s a good performer. Possibly the best of the series and definitely enduring.

A smaller flowered copper-orange echinacea with a bronzed middle. This almost smoulders in the garden.

A salmon-pink echinacea in sandstone-red shades - the middle is also the same shade.

This pale echinacea has clear citron-yellow shading on the petals - flowers age to cream-white.

This rich carmine-red has a pink middle so it’s a very vibrant as the sun fades into dusk.

A magenta-pink echinacea.

This peach-rose echinacea looks like shot-silk.

Other orange/reds (vibrant yet difficult to place)

A pumpkin-orange echinacea with an orange-tinted middle

A new deep orange-red variety.

Strong pinks (stand out well on their own and good to use with grasses)

Selected by Piet Oudolf,, this sturdy echinacea has short blunt petals set round an enormous flat middle - sometimes this rots.

A purple-pink dazzler with fascinating buds and sepals -so this would be among my top three. Easy and long-lived.

A short (55 cm) clear-pink echinacea bearing lots of scented flowers.

A seed-raised strain so variable. Most plants are strong and robust with large deep-pink flowers.

The first fully double pink echinacea. The cone has been replaced by fluffy petals.

A seed strain and the seedlings take a couple of years to develop their tuft of petals. If you see a good form buy it.

White (good with darker colours)

'Kim’s Mophead'

A shorter white-flowered echinacea -again with scented flowers.

'White Swan'

A variable seed-raised white echinacea with golden middles.

Green

'Green Envy'

A two tone red and green - easily lost in the garden although much admired by visitors.

'Coconut Lime'

Another rounded double which has florets where the crown should be-but much neater than 'Razzmatazz'.

'Fragrant Angel'

This a cool-white echinacea with a green middle and green tips to the petals. I can’t wait to grow one.

Grow with

Echinaceas are strong and robust and they look their best among frothy planting and tousled grasses. Deschampsias, panicums and pennisetums offer a contrast. The orange-yellows flatter blue geraniums. The clear-pink forms mingle well with dusky sedums especially 'Purple Emperor'.

How to grow

  • Echinaceas should be left alone once planted because they resent disturbance.
  • If you do have to move them or divide them spring is the best time but you will have to keep all divisions well watered in dry conditions.
  • Some newer varieties (like 'Art’s Pride') often fail to overwinter in wet gardens.
  • E. pallida and E. paradoxa can also be difficult.
  • If possible buy large well-grown plants and get them into the ground by early September.

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