Hardy, summer-flowering, North American perennial Description: Graceful, pale purple flowers with narrow, reflexed ray florets (petals) and a conical, orange-brown disk; showy flowers attract bees and butterflies; birds eat the seeds Habit: Single flowers rise on slender, 4' tall stems; basal leaves form clumps up to 2'' wide Culture: Prefers full sun and well-drained medium to dry soil; drought-tolerant and long-lived Hardiness: Cold hardy to USDA Zone 3 Origin: North America Attributes: Attracts butterflies, bees, and birds, cut flowers, deer resistant, drought tolerant This Eastern North American species, first described as Brauneria pallida and Rudbeckia pallida by English botanist Thomas Nuttall in the early 1800s, is similar to Echinacea angustifolia, but stouter and taller. This species was illustrated in Curtis' Botanical Magazine and mistakenly identified as Rudbeckia purpurea (now Echinacea purpurea). New York seedsman Thomas Bridgeman was offering Coneflowers by the 1840s. Deer are not attracted to this plant. zone3,zone4,zone5,zone6,zone7,zone8,zone9
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