Echinacea purpurea Lemon Drop (Coneflower)
Regular price $7.99 Save $-7.99🛒 Payments Via PayPal® and CreditCard
💵The merchant deposit of USD 100,000 has been paid to PayPal.
Get ready for jaw-dropping discounts starting from 50% off on selected items at our store! 🤩
But wait, there's more! 💥 Buy 4 items and enjoy an extra 10% off, buy 6 items and get an additional 15% off, and if you're feeling extra festive, buy 10 items and receive an extra 20% off! 🎁
Hurry, this limited-time offer won't last long! 🏃 Don't miss out on the biggest savings of the year! 😱
Product Description
Just as tantalizing as its namesake treat, Lemon Drop is a must-have in this year's perennial garden or summer border. Its sunny yellow, double button blooms cover an upright plant from midsummer to fall, showing off bright green centers as they go. This amazing new echinacea variety looks like an old-fashioned sweet, but it is thoroughly modern. It blooms reliably and with great vigor, creating lush displays of blooms wherever it is planted. Lemon Drop's sunny hue pairs equally well with cool, deep blues and purples or warm, lush pinks and reds.
Incredibly pretty, Echinacea purpurea Lemon Drop (Coneflower) is a compact perennial boasting a profusion of double flowers with a prominent bright lemon yellow central pompom surrounded by a skirt of drooping lemon yellow ray petals. Blooming from early summer until early fall, this dwarf coneflower has a strong upright habit with well branched stems that do not flop. Perfect for patio containers, small gardens and perennial borders.
- Grows up to 15-18 in. tall (37-45 cm) and 18-24 in. wide (45-60 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.
- No serious pest or disease issues. The double flowers may not be as attractive to butterflies and birds as single flowers. Deer resistant.
- Remove spent flowers and cut back the stems to encourage further blooms. Deadheading will help them grow and thrive.
- 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.
How To Grow
- Choose a spot with Full or Partial Sun.
- Prepare well draining soil.
- Space them apart according to variety size.
- Water regularly until roots establish, then reduce gradually.
- Do not move them once established.
PayPal is welcomed here.
If you want to checkout with Credit Card. Please Click Paypal and Search for ‘Pay with Debit or Credit Card'