Echinacea Butterfly Kisses (Coneflower)
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Product Description
A charmer! Pretty pink 3” flowers with dark raspberry pink pom-pom cones blanket the bushy foliage. Butterflies flit and flutter with never-ending butterfly kisses as they sip nectar from one of their favorites. It’s hard to imagine a sunny perennial border without Coneflowers. Butterflies love the flowers, birds love the seeds and we love the long-lasting bouquets.
Noted for its compactness and sturdy habit, Echinacea purpurea 'Butterfly Kisses' is a particularly attractive double coneflower with large, fragrant, bright pink ray flowers, 3 in. across (7 cm), adorned with a darker pompom central cone. Well branched, its numerous flowering stems are strong and held upright. Blooming from midsummer until frost, this dwarf coneflower provides a vibrant floral display and is perfect for perennial borders, small gardens or patio containers. Can be used in fresh cut or dried arrangements.
- Grows up to 18 in. tall (45 cm) and 14-16 in. wide (35-40 cm). Thrives in full sun in average, dry to medium moisture, well drained soils. Tolerant of drought, heat and humidity.
- Perfect choice for beds and borders, prairies and meadows, wildflower gardens or cottage gardens.
- Excellent as cut flowers. If flower heads are not removed in the fall, the blackened cones will be visited by birds that feed on the seeds.
- No serious pest or disease issues. Attractive to butterflies, hummingbirds and other pollinators, but deer resistant.
- Remove spent flowers and cut back the stems to encourage further blooms.
- Propagate by division in spring or fall or by root cuttings from late fall to early winter.
Echinacea, commonly called Coneflower, has been cultivated as a hardy and showy perennial since the 1700s, both in North America and Europe. Truly an American plant, native to the central and eastern part of the country, it was used by the early Native Americans to cure wounds and infections. A great prairie flower, its bright and large blossoms made a successful transition to the backyard. Traditionally purple, with ray flowers that droop downward off the central cone, Coneflowers today enjoy a rich variety of colors and flower shapes with ray florets held horizontal, single or even doubled, giving them the look of Chrysanthemum. Easily grown from seed, they thrive on neglect.
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