Planting Echinacea (Coneflower)
Echinacea (Coneflower) is a warm season flower in the Asteraceae family. Getting the timing right is the difference between a strong stand and a disappointing one, so the windows below are given relative to your own last spring frost and first fall frost rather than a generic calendar date. Look up your local frost dates and count back or forward from there.
Echinacea (Coneflower) is started indoors 8–10 weeks before your last spring frost date, giving seedlings a head start before they move outside.
Transplant young plants outdoors 0–2 weeks before your last frost — Echinacea (Coneflower) tolerates cool conditions and benefits from an early start.
Echinacea (Coneflower) can be grown by starting indoors and transplanting. Starting indoors gives the longest, most controlled season, while direct sowing is simplest where the season is long enough.
Spacing and Planting Depth
Give Echinacea (Coneflower) room to mature. The figures below come from verified extension and seed-supplier data for typical varieties.
| Spacing in row | 18 inches |
|---|---|
| Row spacing | 24 inches |
| Plants per sq ft | 0.33 |
| Planting depth | 0.25 inches |
| Sun requirement | Full sun |
Days to Maturity
Echinacea (Coneflower) reaches maturity in 120–150 days from transplant.
Echinacea (Coneflower) is ready to harvest after about 135 days. Harvest before the first fall frost, which will end the plant's productive season.
Conditions and Care
As a warm-season flower, Echinacea (Coneflower) needs warm soil and settled weather to thrive, and is set back or killed by frost. It is frost hardy and can shrug off light freezes, so it can stay in the ground later into the season than tender crops.
Echinacea (Coneflower) needs full sun — give it at least six hours of direct light a day for the best growth and flavor. Sow seed about 0.25 inches deep — small seed is sown shallow and barely covered, then keep the soil evenly moist until seedlings establish.
Echinacea (Coneflower) belongs to the Asteraceae family; rotating where you grow members of this family each year helps limit the build-up of soil-borne pests and disease. Echinacea (Coneflower) is generally grown as a single planting each season rather than succession sown.
Growing Notes
Perennial; blooms year 2 from seed. Pollinator and bird forage.