Echinacea Species, Pale Purple Coneflower

Echinaceapallida

Family
Asteraceae (ass-ter-AY-see-ee)
Genus
Echinacea (ek-in-AY-shee-a)
Species
pallida (PAL-lid-duh)
Synonym
Brauneria pallida
Rudbeckia pallida
Other Details
Water Requirements
Foliage Color
Where to Grow
Grow outdoors year-round in hardiness zone
Bloom Characteristics
Bloom Size
Other details
Soil pH requirements
Patent Information
Propagation Methods
Seed Collecting
Regional

This plant is said to grow outdoors in the following regions:

Auburn, Alabama

El Mirage, Arizona

Scottsdale, Arizona

Deer, Arkansas

North Little Rock, Arkansas

Parthenon, Arkansas

Menifee, California

Colorado Springs, Colorado

Denver, Colorado

Spring Hill, Florida

Glen Ellyn, Illinois

Oak Forest, Illinois

Cedar Falls, Iowa

Frederick, Maryland

Haydenville, Massachusetts

Dearborn Heights, Michigan

Mason, Michigan

Hibbing, Minnesota

Minneapolis, Minnesota

Cole Camp, Missouri

Kansas City, Missouri

Piedmont, Missouri

Lincoln, Nebraska

Oklahoma City, Oklahoma

Schulter, Oklahoma

North Augusta, South Carolina

Brownsville, Tennessee

Bryan, Texas

Leesburg, Virginia

Springfield, Virginia

Seattle, Washington

Menasha, Wisconsin

Milwaukee, Wisconsin

Westfield, Wisconsin

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Gardener's Notes:

5
positives
4
neutrals
0
negative
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R
Downingtown, PA | October 2016 | positive

I've seen this wonderful prairie forb in prairie restorations in northern Illinois and central Wisconsin. It can be easily grown as a gar...Read More

G
(Zone 5a) | February 2012 | neutral

June-September bloom in my garden.

E
(Clint) Medina, TN (Zone 7b) | August 2009 | positive

These plants bloom earlier than my other Echinaceas. These don't like as much water as other Echinaceas in my experience and a fungicide ...Read More

P
Denver, CO (Zone 5b) | June 2009 | positive

Took three growing seasons to flower from seed. It is well worth the wait.

D
D
Cedar Falls, IA (Zone 4b) | July 2007 | positive

For most of Iowa & all Minnesota (although also common southward), this is the native echinacea you will find in the wild, not the more c...Read More

B
Appleton, WI (Zone 5a) | December 2005 | positive

This seems like a plant that wasn't meant for captivity. It is not a refined, delicate plant. It is bulky and not overly flowering. That ...Read More

W
W
Belleville , IL (Zone 6b) | January 2005 | neutral

The dried seed heads can be very irritating to harvest. I have found that the best time to harvest seed is after a rain or early in the m...Read More

T
Mercer, PA (Zone 5a) | October 2004 | neutral

Pale purple coneflower exhibits flowers born on the top of a stiff erect stem. One to several flower stalks per plant. Ray flowers droop ...Read More

J
J
MD &, VA (Zone 7b) | November 2000 | neutral

Cultivation is the same as Echinacea purpurea. This species gets longer flower petals that hang down. Flowers are usually pink but do com...Read More

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