Auburn, Alabama
Ashdown, Arkansas
Carrollton, Georgia
Danielsville, Georgia
Glen Ellyn, Illinois
Pontiac, Illinois
Waukegan, Illinois
Pacific Junction, Iowa
Falmouth, Maine
Horton, Michigan
Pinconning, Michigan
Blackduck, Minnesota
Mathiston, Mississippi
Lincoln, Nebraska
Seaside Heights, New Jersey
Holly Springs, North Carolina
Raleigh, North Carolina
Cleveland, Ohio
Geneva, Ohio
Hamilton, Ohio
Weatherford, Oklahoma
WALTERVILLE, Oregon
Beaver Falls, Pennsylvania
Downingtown, Pennsylvania
Norristown, Pennsylvania
Warwick, Rhode Island
Lake City, South Carolina
Christiana, Tennessee
Clarksville, Tennessee
Nashville, Tennessee
Leesburg, Virginia
Lynchburg, Virginia
Menasha, Wisconsin
show all
Yes, slow to establish and thin and leggy compared to the eastern coneflower... But hardy and beautiful with its brilliant yellow flowers...Read More
Jackson, MI 49246 (zone 5). This echinacea grows so slowly that I think it is not worth the effort. I started a handful of plants indoo...Read More
Bought plant last summer at Bluestone Nurseries and it had one flower and I was so disappointed. I let it dry on the stalk and then spre...Read More
Paradoxa is one of my favorite Echinacea. I love the color and it is slightly fragrant. Butterflies like it too and I enjoy watching them...Read More
Nice bold long lasting flower. I purchased this plant as a bareroot. It seems a slow growing plant but did flower its second summer--a ...Read More
More of a novelty or collector plant around here. Not overly flowering on lanky stems.
I just love its sweet scent.
Echinacea paradoxa blooms in June, when the spring flowers are dying down but before the summer plants get into full swing. It's a beauti...Read More
Easy to grow, attractive blooms, very hardy and drought-tolerant. Goldfinches love the seeds. Downside: It only blooms once a year and ...Read More
A real prize in flower arrangements due to its limited range. Once dry it is nearly, if not completely, impossible to distinguish from pa...Read More
This plant is a U.S. native and grows in Missouri, Texas, Oklahoma and Arkansas.
Truly a paradox: a yellow-flowering "purple coneflower".