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Echinacea ‘Sunseeker Salmon’ (Coneflower)

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P9(9cm Pot)

1 Litre(13cm Pot)

3+ plants

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£30.00

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6+ plants

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£45.00

£58.00

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9+ plants

£60.00

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Exceptional plants, better value

Mix & match • Create your own combination

P9 (9cm)

1 Litre

3+ plants

£25.00

£30.00

Save 5%

6+ plants

Most popular!

£45.00

£58.00

Save 10%

9+ plants 

£65.00

£80.00

Save 15%

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Plant information

Plant Description

Echinacea ‘Sunseeker Salmon’ produces delightful light-pink flowers that grace your garden throughout the summer. To encourage prolonged flowering, it is advisable to deadhead once the initial blooming phase concludes. This variety is a magnet for bees and butterflies, enhancing your garden’s biodiversity, and is known to resist attraction from deer. Moreover, rabbits do not find it appealing. Ideal for pots or sunny borders, ‘Sunseeker Salmon’ adds a vibrant and low-maintenance touch to various garden settings. Its charming blooms make it an attractive and ecologically friendly addition to your outdoor space.

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🌿 How to Care for Echinacea ‘Sunseeker Salmon’ (Coneflower)

How much sun do Echinacea ‘Sunseeker Salmon’ (Coneflower) need?
Echinacea ‘Sunseeker Salmon’ (Coneflower) thrives in full sun—around six hours a day. While it can tolerate light shade, you’ll get the best flowering in bright, open spots.
Echinacea ‘Sunseeker Salmon’ (Coneflower) prefers well-drained soil, ideally sandy or chalky. Rich or heavy soils can cause the plant to flop and reduce flower production.
Water well during the first growing season to help it establish. Once settled, Echinacea ‘Sunseeker Salmon’ (Coneflower) is drought-tolerant and rarely needs extra water unless it’s extremely dry.
Echinacea ‘Sunseeker Salmon’ (Coneflower) doesn’t require much at all. In fact, too much fertiliser—especially nitrogen—can lead to more leaves and fewer flowers. A light feed in spring is plenty, if needed.
Yes—regularly remove faded flowers from Echinacea ‘Sunseeker Salmon’ (Coneflower) to encourage more blooms and stop self-seeding. You can cut the plant back in autumn or early spring to tidy it up and boost new growth.
Divide Echinacea ‘Sunseeker Salmon’ (Coneflower) into clumps every 3 to 5 years in spring or autumn to keep them healthy and vigorous. You can also take soft cuttings in spring.
Yes, Echinacea ‘Sunseeker Salmon’ (Coneflower)is drought handy. Once it’s established, it copes brilliantly in dry conditions, making it perfect for sunny borders and gravel gardens.
Echinacea ‘Sunseeker Salmon’ (Coneflower) is generally low-maintenance, but it can occasionally suffer from aphids or powdery mildew—especially in humid or overcrowded spots. Good airflow and spacing usually prevent problems.

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