Echinacea purpurea ‘Vintage Wine’

Echinacea purpurea ‘Vintage Wine’

£7.00

Out of stock

Potsize – 1L

Deep green leafy clumps set off handsome large deepest pink daisies. The form is a broad spiky green cone, brightened with orange tips, and surrounded by relatively short upward facing ray florets. A later flowering selection made by Piet Oudolf. 85cm July to October.

Echinaceas are hardy as far as temperature goes and they are undoubtedly lovely. What is also not in doubt is that they die reliably in many people’s gardens. At the root of this is the great British Winter climate. Echinaceas want moist roots and dry free flowing air; what we give them is a regular deluge followed by misty, muggy days. The consequence is fungal rots and a dead Coneflower. You can help by planting your Echinacea in an open situation where the breeze will keep the crown drier, but the stark reality is that Echinacea are not reliable in everyone’s garden. As a consequence will only consider complaints about Echinacea within a month of purchase and certainly not following a Winter.

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Echinacea purpurea ‘Vintage Wine’

Deep green leafy clumps set off handsome large deepest pink daisies. The form of Echinacea purpurea ‘Vintage Wine’ is a broad spiky green cone, brightened with orange tips, and surrounded by relatively short upward facing ray florets. A later flowering selection made by Piet Oudolf. 85cm July to October.

Echinacea are the Coneflowers from North America. The deep pink Echinacea purpurea is the most commonly encountered, but the increasing availability of several related species and extensive breeding have greatly increased the diversity available from this genus in recent years. They are easily recognised by the cone of stiff spikes in the centre of each large daisy flower. The flowers can vary from being quite flat to having heavily reflexed petals in Echinacea angustifolia. They are extensively visited by both bees and butterflies for the rich nectar they produce.

Echinacea naturally grow in dry habitats, in open woodland and on prairies. They are very hardy in respect of temperature and also tolerant of heat in summer. They thrive in full sun and will tolerate light shade and drought. Their enemy in Britain is muggy dampness and overcrowding. Think of their native habitat which tends to be dry and often windy. Plant where they will not sit wet in the winter and in a place where there is good air flow around the crown and they can prove excellent garden plants.

Back in the early 1990’s Echinacea purpurea was cross with the yellow Echinacea paradoxa to creatre Echinacea ‘Art’s Pride’. Lovely though this dazzling amber cross was, it proved a disaster in the garden, as did so many of the crosses that follows. Each one as reliably unhardy as it was lovely. Now, 20 years on, crosses such as E. ‘Tomato Soup’, E, ‘Tiki Torch’ and similar are finally bucking the trend, giving us colours right from yellow through oranges to pinks and reds on plants that are reliable in the garden. Couple this with the Prairie planting movement championed by designers such as Piet Oudolf and Echinacea is now one of the most popular of perennials.

Both Echinacea purpurea and Echinacea angustifolia are used in herbal medicine.

Echinacea were originally classified in Rudbeckia

Echinacea angustifolia – black Sampson, Coneflower, Niggerhead, Brauneria pallida

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