Echinacea purpurea ‘salsa red’

Comments:0 Comments

Salsa Red Echinacea

(Commonly sold as Sombrero® Salsa Red Coneflower)


Taxonomy

  • Domain: Eukaryota
  • Kingdom: Plantae
  • Subkingdom: Tracheobionta (vascular plants)
  • Superdivision: Spermatophyta (seed plants)
  • Division: Magnoliophyta (flowering plants)
  • Class: Magnoliopsida (dicotyledons)
  • Subclass: Asteridae
  • Order: Asterales
  • Family: Asteraceae
  • Subfamily: Asteroideae
  • Tribe: Heliantheae
  • Genus: Echinacea
  • Species: Echinacea purpurea (cultivar group)
  • Cultivar: ‘Salsa Red’ (Sombrero® series)

Common Names by Region

  • Salsa Red Coneflower
  • Red Coneflower
  • Sombrero Salsa Red Echinacea
  • Purple Coneflower (general species reference)

Description

Overall Form

Salsa Red Echinacea is a compact, herbaceous perennial selected for vivid saturated red blooms and strong garden performance. Plants form upright clumps with sturdy stems that hold flowers well above the foliage.

Flowers

  • Petals are bright red to scarlet with warm orange undertones.
  • Prominent spiny cone centers shift from orange to bronze as they mature.
  • Blooms are daisy-like but thicker and more durable than many wild forms.
  • Long bloom period from early summer into fall if deadheaded.

Foliage

  • Lance-shaped, slightly rough-textured green leaves.
  • Basal clumping habit with branching flowering stems.
  • Moderate drought tolerance once established.

Size

  • Approx. 18–24 inches tall.
  • 18–24 inches wide.
  • Compact compared to many traditional coneflowers.


Known Range

  • Hardy throughout most of North America in USDA zones ~4–9.
  • Widely used in ornamental gardens, pollinator plantings, and restoration-style landscapes.
  • Performs especially well in areas with warm summers and well-drained soils.


Care / Habitat

  • Light: Full sun preferred (6+ hours daily).
  • Soil: Well-drained; tolerates average to moderately poor soils.
  • Water: Moderate during establishment; drought tolerant afterward.
  • Spacing: 18–24 inches for airflow and strong clump development.
  • Companions: Ornamental grasses, salvias, rudbeckia, and pollinator-focused plantings.


Propagation / Reproduction

  • Division every 3–4 years to maintain vigor.
  • Seed propagation possible but cultivars may not come true to type.
  • Nursery production typically via vegetative propagation for uniform color and height.


Pests / Diseases / Threats

  • Occasional powdery mildew in high humidity with poor airflow.
  • Japanese beetles may feed on petals in some regions.
  • Root rot possible in consistently wet soils.
  • Deer resistance is moderate — young plants may still be browsed.


Additional Notes

  • Highly attractive to bees, butterflies, and other pollinators.
  • Seed heads provide winter interest and food for birds if left standing.
  • Strong candidate for low-maintenance landscapes and pollinator corridors.
  • The saturated red tone holds better in sunlight than many older red cultivars.


Maintenance / Management

  • Deadhead for prolonged flowering, or leave spent cones for winter ecology.
  • Cut back stems in late winter or early spring before new growth emerges.
  • Avoid over-fertilization; excessive fertility can reduce flowering performance.
Spread the love

Categories:

Leave a Reply