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When to Plant Echinacea (Purple Coneflower) in Unity, OR

Unity, OR Zone 6b June

Your June game plan for Unity, OR

Here's what deserves your attention in Unity, OR this month. Everything below is tailored to Zone 6b and timed around your local frost dates.

Avg. last frost May 30
Avg. first frost September 12
Soil temp (4") 66°F
Watering Critical
Pest pressure High
Daylight 15.4 hrs
  1. Harden off and plant echinacea (purple coneflower)

    Plant tomatoes deep — bury the stem up to the first true leaves to grow extra roots. Everything else goes in at the same depth it grew in the tray.

  2. Outdoor sowing time: echinacea (purple coneflower)

    Mark the row. Birds and stray feet both have opinions about unmarked beds.

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Echinacea purpurea (Purple Coneflower) is a long-lived native prairie perennial and one of the most valuable pollinator plants in North American gardens. Its distinctive daisy-like blooms — swept-back lavender-pink petals surrounding a spiny orange-brown cone — attract bees, butterflies, and goldfinches from summer into fall. Drought-tolerant once established, adaptable to average soils, and impressively long-lived; mature clumps bloom reliably for decades.

Unity, Oregon is in USDA Zone 6b. The average last spring frost is May 30 and the first fall frost is September 12, giving you a growing season of approximately 105 days.

At an elevation of 1,398 feet, Baker County receives approximately 16.9 inches of rainfall annually with predominantly silt loam soil. Summer highs average 86°F, providing good warmth for Echinacea (Purple Coneflower) during the growing season. With low rainfall, drip irrigation is essential for growing Echinacea (Purple Coneflower) successfully. Mulch heavily to conserve soil moisture.

Perennial Blooms in Summer Pollinator-friendly Deer-resistant Good for cutting
Unity, OR (Zone 6b) Short season
105 days
Last Spring Frost May 30
105 growing days
First Fall Frost September 12

Unity Soil Profile

Soil Type

Silt Loam

Soil pH

5.3-6.5

Drainage

Well Drained

Echinacea (Purple Coneflower) Planting Risk Windows

Early Start (70% safe) ✗ May not fit
Start indoors: Mar 17 Transplant: May 26 🌸 Bloom: Aug 11 – Dec 1
Recommended (50%) ✗ May not fit
Start indoors: Mar 28 Transplant: Jun 6 🌸 Bloom: Aug 22 – Dec 12
Safe Start (90%) ✓ Fits season (274 days to spare)
Start indoors: Apr 17 Transplant: Jun 26 🌸 Bloom: Sep 11 – Jan 1

Percentages indicate frost risk at transplant. The 70% safe window means there is a 30% chance of frost after transplant — suitable for cold-hardy crops or gardeners with frost protection. The 90% safe window is best for tender plants.

Soil Compatibility in Unity

How your county's soil matches Echinacea (Purple Coneflower)'s growing requirements.

Soil pH

Your soil pH (5.3–6.5) is more acidic than Echinacea (Purple Coneflower) prefers (6.0–7.0). Add garden lime to raise pH.

Soil Texture

The silt loam soil in Baker County is excellent for Echinacea (Purple Coneflower) — good drainage, moisture retention, and nutrient holding capacity.

Drainage

Drainage is adequate for Echinacea (Purple Coneflower).

Organic Matter

Organic matter is excellent (4.8%) — Echinacea (Purple Coneflower) will thrive.

How to Plant Echinacea (Purple Coneflower)

0.3"
Planting Depth
18"
Between Plants
24"
Between Rows

Echinacea (Purple Coneflower) Water Budget

Plant needs
0.5″/week
Rainfall provides
0.7″/week
Watering frequency Natural rainfall sufficient
Season total 0 gal / 100 sq ft

Monthly Watering Guide for Echinacea (Purple Coneflower)

Echinacea (Purple Coneflower) needs approximately 0.5 inches of water per week (2.2" per month). Here's how your county's rainfall compares month by month.

Month Echinacea (Purple Coneflower) Needs Rainfall You Supplement Action
Jan 2.3" 0" ❄️ Dormant
Feb 1.7" 0" ❄️ Dormant
Mar 1.5" 0" ❄️ Dormant
Apr 1.1" 0" ❄️ Dormant
May 2.2" 1.1" 1.1" 🚿 Regular watering
Jun 2.2" 0.6" 1.6" 🚿 Regular watering
Jul 2.2" 0.2" 2" 🚿 Regular watering
Aug 2.2" 0.3" 1.9" 🚿 Regular watering
Sep 2.2" 0.8" 1.4" 🚿 Regular watering
Oct 1.6" 0" ❄️ Dormant
Nov 2.5" 0" ❄️ Dormant
Dec 3.1" 0" ❄️ Dormant

Water needs are for active growing months only (May–Sep in Baker County). Supplement amounts are based on average rainfall — actual needs vary with temperature, soil, and mulching.

Echinacea (Purple Coneflower) Heat Requirements (GDD)

What are Growing Degree Days (GDD)?

Growing Degree Days measure the total warmth your plants receive during the growing season. Think of it as a "heat bank" — every day above 50°F deposits warmth that helps your plants grow.

Each plant needs a certain amount of accumulated heat to mature. If your county provides more GDD than the plant needs, it's a great fit. If it's close, you may want to choose faster-maturing varieties or start seeds indoors to get a head start.

Echinacea (Purple Coneflower) needs ~1,160 GDD — county provides 1,522 GDD Excellent fit

Echinacea (Purple Coneflower) Planting Timeline — Unity, OR

Echinacea (Purple Coneflower) Planting Calendar

Activity When Date Range
Start Indoors March 28 Mar 28 – Apr 11
Transplant Outdoors June 6 Jun 6 – Jun 20
Direct Sow June 6 Jun 6 – Jun 27
Bloom August 22 Aug 22 – Dec 12

Plant 0.3" deep · 18" apart · Rows 24" apart

Month-by-Month Timeline

MonthActivities
January
February
March Start Indoors
April Start Indoors
May
June Transplant Outdoors Direct Sow
July
August Bloom
September Bloom
October Bloom
November Bloom
December Bloom

Growing Conditions

☀️ Sun

Full Sun (6-8+ hours)

💧 Water

0.5"/week · Natural rainfall sufficient

📅 Days to Maturity

70–90 days

🧪 Soil pH

Needs 6–7 · Your soil: too_acidic

🗺️ USDA Zone

Zone 6b

📆 Growing Season

105 days in Baker County

Growing Tips for Echinacea (Purple Coneflower) in Unity

Direct sow Echinacea (Purple Coneflower) outdoors after May 30 in Baker County when soil has warmed and frost danger has passed.

Common pests for Echinacea (Purple Coneflower) in this region include aphids and slugs. Use row covers early in the season and inspect plants weekly.

Baker County receives only 17" of rain annually. Echinacea (Purple Coneflower) needs consistent moisture — install drip irrigation or water deeply 2-3 times per week.

General growing tips

Start seeds indoors 8–10 weeks before last frost or direct-sow in fall for natural cold stratification. Seeds require 4–8 weeks of cold moist stratification (or fall sowing) for best germination. Transplant when night temps stay above 50°F. Full sun is essential for heavy bloom. Avoid over-fertilizing — lean soil produces more compact, floriferous plants. Deadhead for continuous bloom but leave some cones standing in fall for goldfinch seed harvest. Year 2+ plants bloom most heavily; first-year transplants may produce limited flowers. Divide congested clumps every 3–4 years in early spring.

Companion Planting

Good Companions

Check more plant combinations with our Companion Planting Checker →

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Your Baker County Garden Planner — Free

A 22-page printable planner built for Baker County (Zone 6b). Planting dates, a month-by-month schedule, harvest log, seed inventory, and succession charts — all dialed in for your exact growing season.

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Data sources: USDA Plant Hardiness Zone Map (2023), NOAA 30-Year Climate Normals. Frost dates are based on 50% probability averages for Baker County, OR. Local conditions may vary. Last updated: June 2026.