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echinacea angustifolia seeds Echinacea angustifoliaEchinacea angustifolia## HOW TO GROW ECHINACEA ANGUSTIFOLIA Sow at 64 71F for 2 4 weeks, move to 40F cold stratification for 9 weeks, move to 50F for germination. Requires constant moisture for germination. If it is difficult to maintain ideal moisture conditions in the field, direct sowing is not recommended. Plant out directly or pot up once or twice enhances root development. Reduce weed competition to enhance root production for medicine. Seeds
Echinacea angustifolia##
HOW TO GROW ECHINACEA ANGUSTIFOLIA
Sow at 64-71˚F for 2-4 weeks, move to 40˚F cold stratification for 9 weeks, move to 50˚F for germination. Requires constant moisture for germination. If it is difficult to maintain ideal moisture conditions in the field, direct sowing is not recommended. Plant out directly or pot up once or twice enhances root development. Reduce weed competition to enhance root production for medicine. Seeds require light to germinate, press into soil, do not cover. Read more about growing on our web site.Echinacea angustifolia will not tolerate acid soils. Do not start in potting soils with peat moss or sawdust, use coir with a neutral pH. It needs alkaline soils and will tolerate very high alkaline levels. Start greenhouse grown plants 120 days before planting date in individual pots or seedling trays. There are about 145,000 seeds per pound of Echinacea angustifolia. You will need 30,000 to 40,000 plants or 1.5 to 2 pounds of seed per acre. Plants transplant well if watered-in with water transplanter or by hand.Treatment with ethylene gas has been shown to speed germination of Echinacea angustifolia by Neil Reese of the South Dakota State University. Ethylene is a plant hormone associated with ripening apples and pears. Ethrel is commercially available non-organic product that releases ethylene gas and is sold under the trade name “Ethephon”. For an organic method, place flats in a root cellar with ripening apples for a couple weeks. Alternately, direct so in the August on steam cleaned, sterilized soil at the rate of 100 seeds per square foot. Seeds will stratify naturally, germinate in early spring and be ready to transplant into bareroot into rows by June or the beginning of July at the latest. Controlling weeds is difficult with direct sowing because the plants are very small until well established and require hand weeding. Don’t fertilize until plants are established in mid-July to not stimulate weed growth.Once established, echinaceas thrive with little care, are drought tolerant and do not favor highly enriched soil. Good drainage is essential, will not tolerate wet soils. Per acre, 1,500 pounds of dry foliage the second and third year is a good crop and 1,200 pounds of roots is good at the end of the third year. Concentrate on growing strong Echinacea plants the first year. Harvest foliage “the herb’ the second and third growing season without hurting root production very much. Harvest and dehydrate root in the autumn of the third year. Harvest foliage like hay, cut, swath, sun dry and bale. For the highest quality herb cut and dehydrate it at 120˚F to 10 percent moisture content, then bale, put in burlap bag and sew shut.E. angustifolia is more difficult to harvest than E. purpurea. Echinacea angustifolia roots will grow down 15 to 18”. You can hand dig but this generally looses the bottom several inches. To harvest the most root, run a tractor pulled sub-soil knife with long bars behind it to raise the soil several inches and pop the roots up a bit, then dig with a modified field potato digger. Take to rotary washer, dry at 120˚F until less than 10 percent moisture. Put in burlap bag, weight and sew shut. If you hand dig a field, you may see 15-20 percent root grow-back the next spring. Soil pH 6.1-7.0. Hardiness zones 3-10. Perennial.
Days from maturity calculated from the date of seeding. Average 3,300 seeds per ounce. Difficult to germinate. With stratified seed, 28 percent to 35 percent germination is okay and 40 percent is great. It is normal to buy seed guaranteed to have 80 percent viable embryos and still only get 28-35 percent germination due to the large number that abort after moisture is added to the soil. Usual seed life: best fresh 1st year, but remains viable up to 7 years if refrigerated. Do not save first year seed, 2% germination rate. Good seed crops from second or third year seed, up to 100 pounds of seed per acre.
Planting Depth surface-1/4” requires light
Soil Temp. Germ. 65-70˚F stratify
Days to Germ. 15-25
Plant Spacing 12”
Row Spacing 18-24”
Days To Maturity 2-3 years
Part Shade, Moist Well Drained
##Echinacea angustifolia is much more difficult to germinate, grow and harvest than Echinacea purpurea. Taken at the early stage of any infection, primarily for the prevention or treatment of cold and flu symptoms, Echinacea speeds the immune system response by up to 24 hours. Blood purifier. Drought tolerant, long lasting for cut or dry flowers, sturdy and prolific, grows 16 to 28” tall. Also known as narrow leaved purple coneflower. Tags: Color: Purple, Specialty: Drought Tolerant.Days from maturity calculated from the date of seeding. Average 3,300 seeds per ounce. Difficult to germinate. With stratified seed, 28 percent to 35 percent germination is okay and 40 percent is great. It is normal to buy seed guaranteed to have 80 percent viable embryos and still only get 28-35 percent germination due to the large number that abort after moisture is added to the soil. Usual seed life: best fresh 1st year, but remains viable up to 7 years if refrigerated. Do not save first year seed, 2% germination rate. Good seed crops from second or third year seed, up to 100 pounds of seed per acre.
Planting Depth surface-1/4” requires light
Soil Temp. Germ. 65-70˚F stratify
Days to Germ. 15-25
Plant Spacing 12”
Row Spacing 18-24”
Days To Maturity 2-3 years
Part Shade, Moist Well Drained
Echinacea angustifolia is a prairie species found in the U.S. and Canada on barrens and dry western parries with rocky to sandy-clay soil. There are two subspecies: E. a. angustifolia is native from Saskatchewan and Manitoba in the north to New Mexico, Texas, and Louisiana in the south, while E. a. strigosa has a more limited range in Kansas, Oklahoma, Texas, and Louisiana. Echinacea is a genus of nine plant species in the aster family native to North America. Echinacea species were used by native groups for medicinal purposes than any other plant. Today Echinacea is the best selling herb in health-food stores accounting for nearly 10 percent of total sales in the U.S.
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4.6 ★★★★★
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Product Reviews
★★★★★ 1
Don’t buy
Size: 28'' X 34''
Mine arrived broken and scratched I think I received one that someone had returned. It also doesn’t hold pads that well my 4 lb teacup Yorkie is able to pull the pad off of the pad holder without even ripping the pad.
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Reviewed in the United States on March 26, 2026
★★★★★ 5
Excellent!
Size: 22'' X 22''
Highly recommend this pad holder. Does an excellent job keeping the pad secure and in place. No more shredded pads since. Bonus: no leaks on the floor. It’s so practical and so helpful.
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Reviewed in the United States on March 1, 2026
★★★★★ 3
Pretty Good But Not Perfect!
Size: 28'' X 34''
I have been using two of these frames for my miniature poodle puppy for almost a month now and while they are useful, they could be improved. The size of the frames are great for our miniature size poodle puppy and the Amazon pads that fit the frames absorb well without leaking underneath. The grips on the bottom of the frame keep it in place so it does not slide across floor. The frame hinges in the center so you can easily carry it through doorways. I am in my 60's so it is nice to be able to carry it to my work table in order to change pads while standing up.
My 4 month old 10 pound puppy can make a dinner plate size circle of pee onto the pad first thing in the morning. 4 large pees are easily held by the pee pads before needing to change it but we prefer to change the pads more often for sanitary reasons. Not sure if you have a very large breed dog that these would work for you. Our puppy likes going on these without hesitation so they are comfortable for him to walk around on and turn to find just the right spot!
Compared to other brands I have looked at this is a great value for money and worth a try to help with potty training your pup. Our puppy sleeps in an X-pen inside of our home at night and when we are gone so these help with keeping the pads where we want them. We have two - one inside X-pen and one by door where we are training puppy to go outside.
These frames are nice in appearance and seem like they will last but they are a little awkward to use compared to another brand I purchased which was more durable and easier to change pad. I ended up with these because other brands do not offer such a large size (28 x 34).
Our main complaints about these frames are:
1. The top frame is hinged and a little wobbly to manuever over the edges of the pee pads. Another brand, while a bit smaller, has a solid one piece frame that goes over entire pad in one step. This frame requires a three step process of laying pad down, pulling edges out flat and placing one side of frame down and then repeating on other side. There is usually a bit of adjustment that needs to be done and so requires opening and closing the frame again for adjustments.
2. The Amazon pee pads that fit this frame hold the pee well without leaking but have very thin tissue paper like edges (blue) that do not extend out far enough to make capturing the edges of the pee pad under the frame very easy to maneuver. It would be a game changer if the pads were made at least 1" bigger around length and width so edges are firmly held in place.
3. Our tiny 10 pound poodle pup is able to easily dig out edges of pad and tear it up. Not as bad as a loose pad by any means, but blue edges are exposed at side centers where frame hinges and there is no cover of edges (unlike a one piece frame) and the blue color seems to attract him. He can dig and loosen pad on any side because there is no way to hide and hold down all of the blue edges of pee pad.
I am still using these to potty train and, as I said earlier, these are way better than loose pee pads. I may shop for even larger size pee pads in the future to better lock down all of the edges without so much difficulty.
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Reviewed in the United States on May 5, 2026
★★★★★ 4
Good product for dog training.
Size: 22'' X 22''
Work for the most part. Dogs will chew on it so wipe it down with dawn dish soap. Hard to clean where it clips down.
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Reviewed in the United States on March 13, 2026
★★★★★ 5
Saving My Floors
Size: 28'' X 34'', Size: 28'' X 34''
Omg, what a game changer. My pups like to destroy the pads whenever they get the chance to. With this they still try but never succeed. I will say that it can be a little sturdier as the handles are a little flimsy, but I manage and it does the job. It's very easy to use when I change the pads and I use 2 pads for coverage. I just placed it where I usually place their pads and it fits right in the spot. They are trained to go outside but on rainy days this comes in handy. To save my floors it's definitely worth the money spent.
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Reviewed in the United States on April 26, 2026