plant coneflower seeds Double Pink Sherbet Coneflower Seeds ~ Echinacea Hybrid ~ Flowering Plant ~  Unusual Flowers ~ Flower ~ Growing Flowers ~ Garden ~ Plant
SKU: 24159318557
plant coneflower seeds

plant coneflower seeds Double Pink Sherbet Coneflower Seeds ~ Echinacea Hybrid ~ Flowering Plant ~ Unusual Flowers ~ Flower ~ Growing Flowers ~ Garden ~ Plant

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plant coneflower seeds Double Pink Sherbet Coneflower Seeds ~ Echinacea Hybrid ~ Flowering Plant ~ Unusual Flowers ~ Flower ~ Growing Flowers ~ Garden ~ PlantConeflowers have raised cone like centers (hence, their name, which attract butterflies and bees. After bloom, the seed heads attract songbirds, such as goldfinches. Coneflowers love heat and are trouble free once established in a traditional garden or wildflower meadow. ~ Includes ~ ~ 25 Seeds. ~ Grow and Care Instructions. Follow Me Instagram: YourPlantBitch Facebook: Your Plant Biitch Please visit me YourPlantBitchcom, explore all of my exclusive

Coneflowers have raised cone-like centers (hence, their name, which attract butterflies and bees. After bloom, the seed heads attract songbirds, such as goldfinches. Coneflowers love heat and are trouble-free once established in a traditional garden or wildflower meadow.

~ Includes ~

~ 25 Seeds.

~ Grow and Care Instructions.

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💕 Please visit me YourPlantBitchcom, explore all of my exclusive collections including my newest items. Rest assured, my main concern is my customers always!!! I try to provide the best customer service and strive to create a positive shopping experience for my customers. I’m always available to answer any questions or concerns you may have before and after your purchase. Custom orders are welcome!!! I can even include a handwritten gift card for no additional cost. Feel free to send me an offer since I will always do my absolute best to work with my customer’s offers. Contact me with any questions or if you’re interested in my sold~out items or need different quantities. 

 

💗Grow and Care Instructions for Coneflowers💗

~ Grow Instructions ~

Dampen a Paper Towel. Fold a paper towel in half.

Treat the Seeds. Sprinkle the coneflower seeds on one-half of the paper towel.

Prep the Pots. Fill 8-inch-deep seedling pots with moistened potting soil.

Sow your coneflower seeds on top of the soil and gently press them in without covering them completely.

Cover the Pots.

Remove the Bag.

Transplant the Seedlings.

Water the Coneflowers.

The seeds need light to germinate successfully. Coneflowers prefer full sun and well-draining soil. Coneflowers are very tolerant of poor soil conditions, but they bloom best in soil that’s nutrient rich. Loosen soil to a depth of 12 to 15 inches and mix in a 2 to 4 inch layer of compost or aged manure. Choose a location where the coneflowers won’t get shaded out nor sit in wet soil. They will spread readily in the right conditions.

* Plant coneflowers when small, with blooms on the way, in spring or early summer.

* Seeds can be started indoors 8 to 10 weeks before the last spring frost last spring frost date. Or sow them outdoors when the soil has warmed to at least 65°F/18°C. Seed-sown plants are not likely to bloom for 2 to 3 years.

    * Note: Don’t cut back coneflower plants and they’ll self-seed readily.

* If dividing or transplanting coneflowers, do so in the spring or fall.

* Plant coneflowers about 1 to 3 feet apart, depending on the mature size of the variety.

* If planting from a pot, dig a hole about twice the pot’s diameter. Set the plant so that the root ball is level with the soil surface. Fill in to the top of the root ball. 

* Water it thoroughly at planting.

* Spread thin layers of compost, then mulch, on the soil surface to help keep plants moist and prevent weeds.

Coneflowers are drought tolerant, but new plants need water occasionally, and more often if the spring season is especially dry. 

* Put a thin layers of compost and mulch around the plants to help keep them  moist and prevent weeds.

* Native in ground seldom need fertilizer. Ensure your soil has plenty of organic matter when you plant.

* In late spring, provide supplementary water only if the season is extremely dry or your coneflowers are newly planted.

* To prolong the bloom period, deadhead when flowers fade. Cut back stems to a leaf near a bud. Deadheading in late season prevents self-seeding and bird-feeding.

* Optional: To encourage delayed blooming for fall enjoyment, cut coneflower plants back by 1 foot when plants come into bloom. This will result in later-flowering, more-compact growth because coneflowers can get leggy. Cut some and not others for more staggered bloom heights and times.

* Beneficial wasplike soldier beetles may appear in August. They feed on insect eggs and larvae and pollinate plants. Do not harm them.

* In late fall in colder regions, lightly spread mulch around plants.

* Optional: Consider leaving late-season flowers on the plants to mature. The seed heads will attract birds and promote self-seeding. Deadheading will prevent self seeding, if this is your preference. To deadhead, cut the dead flower back to a leaf where you can see a bud ready to swell. 

* Divide or transplant coneflowers in spring or fall.

Growing in a Pot

We tend to grow coneflowers in the ground as perennial plants, but you can certainly grow them in pots if the containers are deep enough for the plant’s taproot. Use 2- or 3-gallon (or larger) pots, with drainage holes. Spread crushed gravel in the bottom of the pots for drainage. Fill the pot halfway with potting mix. Tamp down. Plant the root ball an inch below the rim of the container, spreading out the roots. Add soil slowly until it is even with the top of the root ball, tamping down lightly. Water deeply.

* Keep pots in partial shade for 2 to 3 days, then place in full morning sun and partial afternoon shade.

* Always water deeply at soil level with the soil is dry to the touch. Water on leaves can cause fungal disease.

* Fertilizer every couple of seeks with a water-soluble 10-10-10 product.

* Deadhead just below the base of the flower for continued bloom.

* To overwinter, prune plants to soil level when plant growth slows in fall.

* Move to a cool (40º to 50ºF) area, with low to moderate indirect light.

* Check the soil every couple of weeks and water lightly when the top 3 inches are dry. 

* When new.growth appears in spring, move to a brighter, warmer (60º to 70ºF) area. Moving the plant helps to prepare it for living outdoors in the spring and summer. 

* Do not water leaves from above, as this can encourage fungal disease on leaves. Instead, water at soil level. Use an insecticidal soap or neem oil solution spray if you see any aphids or pests.

* Every 3 to 4 years, in spring after new growth has started, divide and repot echinacea plants.

 

Thank you so very much for supporting my small business!!!🪴Happy Planting 🪴 

💚 Best Wishes, Your Plant Bitch (Quinn)

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Reviewed in the United States on March 27, 2026
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Reviewed in the United States on December 13, 2025
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Paul Garbarini
Lowell, US
★★★★★ 5
Extraordinary resource
Format: Paperback, Format: Paperback
I am a Cultural History Interpreter in SC. Working at a plantation historic site to bring suppressed history to light is challenging. Prof Sinha's book gives us easily accessible documentation to counter the "Lost Cause" devotees who appear on the site almost daily. Her writing style is clear and lucid, a trait for which I am extremely grateful. The site is including this volume in our staff library. For those just entering the field of Public History, it is indispensable. For the rest of it is a very valuable resource. Highly recommended!
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Reviewed in the United States on May 8, 2019
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Grantham, US
★★★★★ 4
An important contribution
The historiography of secession is a complex one. For much of the last century there had been a tendency for historians to underplay the importance of slavery as a cause of the American civil war. Certaintly neo-Confederate apologists have sought to euphemize the cause of the conflict to an issue over tariffs, to matters of states rights, or to the "extremism" of the abolitionists. It is quite clear that these excuses will not survive a reading of this book. Sinha clearly shows, in her examination of South Carolina secessionism from nullifaction to fort Sumter, that slavery was the essence of its concerns. To show this she looks at the nullification crisis, the Mexican war, the Compromise of 1850, the South Carolinian movement to reopen the slave trade, and the secession crisis, based on exhaustive research of no less than 137 sets of private papers and diaries. But Sinha wishes not simply to refute the academically unimportant group of neo-Calhounites. She wishes to argue something broader. The South Carolinian defense of slavery was not, as many serious historians suggest today, simply the working out of the Southern American view of liberty. Increasingly, Sinha argues, South Carolina pro-slavery thought was not the expression of Southern Republicanism, but increasingly its very negation. It was not a coincidence that secessionism was strongest in South Carolina, the only state by 1832 where presidential electors and the governor were not popularly elected, where the legislature was crudely malapportioned, and where local offices were limited by the state government. It was also not a coincidence that slaves were a majority of South Carolinians, and slaveholders nearly a majority of South Carolinian whites. And it certainly was not a coincidence that non-slaveholders were noticeably less enthusiastic for nullification, secession in 1851 and secession in 1861. But although Southern nationalist discourse was clearly elitist and pro-slavery, does Sinha show that it was counter-revolutionary? A certain opposition to democracy was evident after all in the many, perhaps most, of the founding fathers. But as Sinha points out leading Carolinians like Calhoun, Senator James Chesnut and the creepy, incestuous James Hammond all sneered at the Declaration of Independence. She quotes one bravado warping PatricK Henry to declare "Give me Slavery or give me death." Notwithstanding the views of some historians to the contrary the South Carolinians criticized the North less for its oppression of wage laborers than the possiblity that those laborers could vote themselves into power. They did not condemn Lincoln as an intolerant Protestant but as a dangerous socialist and feminist. Moreover, they were not slow to raise the Nativist card against the immigrants who were bolstering the North's population. Calhoun's idea of a concurrent majority was not a thoughtful protection of minority rights, but a way to prevent one minority, his own, from ever being outvoted. Once the Confederacy was set up the elite dispensed with political parties. Looking at South Carolina they also began to dispense with competitive elections, while its ruthless elite certainly did not act sentimentally (or even decently) towards opinions on slavery. In conclusion there have been many frauds and bullies in American political life: the Nixons, the Hoovers, the McCarthys, the Tillmans and the Bilbos. But much of their malignancy was purely personal and they never threatened the core ideals of the republic. Calhoun was different, very different. Extremely intelligent, he was also utterly principled, and absolutely ruthless in carrying out that one principle. The problem was that the principle, despite all the complications of honor and paternalism, was slavery. More so than anyone else, Calhoun was the greatest enemy of liberty and freedom the United States ever had. Sinha's book is an important contribution to understanding that.
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Reviewed in the United States on December 29, 2000
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Annie Hinson
Dallas, US
★★★★★ 5
Great information on an understudied area
Format: Paperback
Thanks for an insight to the other side. Students of Southern history -- this is a must read. Pick it up
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Reviewed in the United States on August 1, 2013

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