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Kismet® Raspberry Coneflower (Echinacea)

Perennial

31 total reviews

  • Fill your summer garden with vibrant pink blooms!
  • Long-lasting and fragrant blooms attract pollinators.
  • Drought tolerant and easy to care for!
  • Zones 4-10, sun, 18" tall x 24" wide at maturity.
  • ZONE
  • EXPOSURE
  • HEIGHT
Size: One Quart
Regular price $16.99
Sale price Sale: $16.99 Regular price $17.99 Each
Total: $16.99
Shipping calculated at checkout.

Hand-Picked at Our Greenhouse
Shipped to Your Door
Arrives as a Young Plant
60 Day Risk-Free Guarantee
Hand-Picked at Our Greenhouse
Shipped to Your Door
Arrives as a Young Plant
60 Day Risk-Free Guarantee
Hand-Picked at Our Greenhouse
Shipped to Your Door
Arrives as a Young Plant
60 Day Risk-Free Guarantee
Hand-Picked at Our Greenhouse
Shipped to Your Door
Arrives as a Young Plant
60 Day Risk-Free Guarantee
Hand-Picked at Our Greenhouse
Shipped to Your Door
Arrives as a Young Plant
60 Day Risk-Free Guarantee
Hand-Picked at Our Greenhouse
Shipped to Your Door
Arrives as a Young Plant
60 Day Risk-Free Guarantee

Description

Kismet® Raspberry coneflower (Echinacea x) covers your garden in a cheery shade of pink all summer long! Long-lasting blooms grace your landscape from summer until fall, adding fragrance and attracting pollinators during their stay. This easy to care for perennial boasts larger flowers than other coneflowers and exceptional winter hardiness. Beginner and expert gardeners alike will be delighted each year as raspberry-pink blooms make their garden come to life without much work or worry. Try planting this deer-resistant perennial along sunny borders for a colorful display that looks attractive all season long.

Details

Botanical name: Echinacea x 'TNECHKR'
Common name: Coneflower, echinacea
Patent #: USPP 28,768
Zone: 4 - 10
Sun exposure: Sun (6+ hours sun)
Height x width: 16-18" x 24"
Flower color: Pink
Foliage color: Green
Bloom time: Summer-fall
Features: Native, heat tolerant, drought tolerant, deer resistant, cold tolerant
Uses: Border, cottage gardening, massing, naturalizing, pollinator specimen, wildflower

How to Grow

Soil: Any well-drained soil will do.
Light: Full sun. Plant them in a spot that gets at least 6 hours of full sun a day. If planted in too much shade, plants may flop or strain to reach the sun.
Water: Average. Water regularly the first season to encourage good root growth. Though coneflowers handle heat and dry conditions well once established, they appreciate regular watering and flower more if they are not stressed.
Spacing: 24 inches
Fertilizing: Little needed. Over fertilizing will cause spindly growth, so once in the spring with a granular garden fertilizer is more than sufficient.
Winterizing: Avoid damp spots. Do not heap mulching over crowns in winter, as this can cause rot. Leave the foliage and old flowers standing for winter (birds enjoy the seed heads), then trim back or remove spent foliage in early spring before new growth emerges.
Maintenance & Pruning: Once planted, they are best left alone, as they do not transplant well. Deadheading (snipping off the spent blooms) is not necessary but does increase new flower production.
Pink and orange coneflowers in a garden

Your Questions on Coneflowers, Answered

Learn how to grow coneflowers, if they require deadheading, which birds eat coneflower seeds, and everything else you need to know to grow them like a pro.

Grow with confidence

Plant spacing is based on the ultimate width of the plants. This figure is normally given as a range; for example, 3-5’. If you live in a cold climate and/or want plants to fill in more quickly, plan to space at the shorter end of the range. If you live in a warm climate, are on a limited budget, or are willing to wait longer for plants to touch, use the higher end of the range. Using the larger number is recommended when calculating distance from a building or structure. There’s really no such thing as "maximum spacing": if you don’t want your plants to touch, you can space them as far apart as you’d like. All plant spacing is calculated on center, or in other words, the centers of the plants are spaced one half of their eventual width apart:

bush distance

Unless you are planting in a straight line, as you might for hedges or edging, space your plants in a staggered or zig-zag pattern for a more interesting and naturalistic look:

bush distance zigzag

Not sure just how many plants will fit in your garden? Our calculator gives you the exact amount of plants required for your space. Simply update the values and the calculator will re-calculate accordingly. Spacing information can be found in the 'How to Grow' tab on each plant's page.

Plant Spacing Calculator

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