Echinacea 'YELLOW PEARL'
Echinacea 'YELLOW PEARL'
coneflower
coneflower
SIZE/TYPE | mid-sized perennial |
---|---|
USUAL HEIGHT | 0.3-0.4m |
USUAL WIDTH | 0.3-0.5m |
LEAVES | deciduous broadleaf |
COLOUR OF LEAVES | green |
FLOWERS | showy |
COLOUR OF FLOWERS | +multicolored:golden and yellow |
BLOOMING TIME | July - September |
LOCATION | full sun |
USDA zone (lowest) | 4 (down to -34°C) |
WINTER PROTECTION | |
FOR ZONE 5+6 | |
FOR ZONE 7 | |
BELONGS TO CATEGORIES |
Perennials Summer blooms |
PEARL is another coneflower series comprising of compact and very floriferous plants. Their stems seldom exceed 35 cm, and flat, single, typically daisy-like flowers bear rich, pastel colours.
Yellow Pearl coneflower makes compact tufts of about 30 cm tall stems bearing deep golden yellow flowers. They are single and mature to butter yellow. The discs are green first and as they change to cones, they turn dark orange and hide plenty of nectar especially for bees, bumble bees, and butterflies. Flowering begins in July and finishes in early autumn if you feed the plant every two weeks during summer. Regular deadheading will promote formation of new buds and flowers, too. Leaves are broadly lanceolate, dark green, deeply veined, very large, and recall rudbeckia foliage.
The plant is usually trouble-free and resistant, just be careful is slugs are present in your garden. Since coneflowers emerge quite late, often when slugs are already in their lethal strength, they could gobble up newly emerging foliage totally and thus destroy the plant before it even comes out.
Coneflower will tolerate almost any soil type but boggy. It loves full sun. It is suitable for mixed borders with perennials, or can be used as a flowering feature among low shrubs and conifers, and looks lovely when planted in a mass in a container on patios and balconies. Fully hardy to min -34°C (USDA zone 4).
Last update 05-09-2018
Yellow Pearl coneflower makes compact tufts of about 30 cm tall stems bearing deep golden yellow flowers. They are single and mature to butter yellow. The discs are green first and as they change to cones, they turn dark orange and hide plenty of nectar especially for bees, bumble bees, and butterflies. Flowering begins in July and finishes in early autumn if you feed the plant every two weeks during summer. Regular deadheading will promote formation of new buds and flowers, too. Leaves are broadly lanceolate, dark green, deeply veined, very large, and recall rudbeckia foliage.
The plant is usually trouble-free and resistant, just be careful is slugs are present in your garden. Since coneflowers emerge quite late, often when slugs are already in their lethal strength, they could gobble up newly emerging foliage totally and thus destroy the plant before it even comes out.
Coneflower will tolerate almost any soil type but boggy. It loves full sun. It is suitable for mixed borders with perennials, or can be used as a flowering feature among low shrubs and conifers, and looks lovely when planted in a mass in a container on patios and balconies. Fully hardy to min -34°C (USDA zone 4).
Last update 05-09-2018
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