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How to Grow Coneflowers

Posted: 01 Jun 2022 01:00 AM PDT

Colorful, striking, and extremely hardy, coneflowers (Echinacea) are the perfect summer perennial for your garden. They're easy to care for regardless of your experience level and attract helpful pollinators like bees, hummingbirds, and butterflies. If you're wondering how to grow this vibrant wildflower in your garden, you've come to the right place! Our complete guide will show you everything you need to know about coneflower planting, growth, and care.

[Edit]Steps

[Edit]Creating the Right Conditions for Coneflowers

  1. Plant your coneflowers in the spring.[1] It's safe to plant coneflowers once the danger of frost has fully passed, but they can be cultivated throughout the rest of spring and early summer as well.[2] Coneflowers enjoy a long flowering season, typically blooming from mid-summer into the fall.
    Grow Coneflowers Step 1.jpg
    • Seeds can be started inside the house 6 to 8 weeks before the last spring frost or outside once the soil has warmed to around (usually in the spring).[3]
    • If you're dividing or transplanting existing coneflowers in your garden, do it in the spring or fall.
  2. Pick a spot that offers full sun. Coneflowers are happiest when they have access to direct sunlight for 6 to 8 hours each day. Because they're heat resistant, you won't have to worry about them getting damaged or dried out in the sun. However, coneflowers can also tolerate light shade if necessary.[4]
    Grow Coneflowers Step 2.jpg
    • If they get too much shade, your coneflowers will be vulnerable to powdery mildew, and you'll notice they have droopy stems.
  3. Make sure the garden has well-drained soil and compost. Coneflowers do best with well-drained (not overly wet) soil rich in organic matter. Once you've picked an ideal spot, loosen the soil with a garden fork and mix in a to layer of compost so your coneflowers have plenty of nutrients.[5]
    Grow Coneflowers Step 3.jpg
    • To check your soil's drainage, dig a hole that's about wide and deep. Fill it with water and let it drain completely before filling the hole again. Monitor the water level this time: if your soil is well-drained, the water level will drop by every hour.
    • Coneflowers are hardy flowers that can flourish in a wide range of conditions, so it's okay if your soil isn't perfect. Plus, adding compost improves your soil's drainage.
  4. Select a type of coneflower to grow. Purple coneflowers (Echinacea purpurea) are the traditional purple blooms you probably picture when you think of coneflowers. However, hybridized versions of purpurea also come in vibrant red, orange, and pink shades. These large flowers can grow to be tall and wide.[6] Other varieties include:
    Grow Coneflowers Step 4 Version 2.jpg
    • Yellow coneflowers (Echinacea paradoxa) are bright blooms that can be grown next to other types of coneflower or grown separately. They grow in multi-stemmed clumps that can be up to tall and wide.
    • Narrow-leaved coneflowers (Echinacea angustifolia) work well in small spots. This compact coneflower stays between - tall and wide. Its pink petals are paler than those of the purple coneflower.
  5. Place coneflowers next to other perennials. You can create a healthy and colorful garden by pairing coneflowers with plants that attract pollinators and have similar needs. Coneflowers are perennials, which are plants that grow back year after year, so other perennials are easy to grow in the same space.
    Grow Coneflowers Step 5 Version 2.jpg
    • Meadow perennials like bee balm, black-eyed susans, lavender, asters, lupines, and larkspur are all great choices to pair with coneflowers.[7]

[Edit]Planting Coneflowers

  1. Space out the coneflowers to be to apart. Since full-grown coneflower plants will grow quite a bit—anywhere from to wide, and up to , it's important to give them space to grow. Make sure there's enough room in your garden for all of the coneflowers that you want to plant.[8]
    Grow Coneflowers Step 6 Version 3.jpg
    • If space gets tight, consider growing a more compact variety like narrow-leaved coneflowers.
  2. Bury coneflower plants to the top of their roots and water them. Dig a hole big enough for the plant; if the coneflower came in a pot, the hole's width should be twice the pot's diameter. Then, place the plant in the hole, so its root ball is even with the soil surface. Fill in the rest of the soil. When you're done, water the coneflower generously to encourage deep roots.[9]
    Grow Coneflowers Step 7 Version 2.jpg
    • Digging such a wide hole is helpful because it gives the coneflower's roots space to spread and grow.
    • Immediately after planting and watering the coneflowers, apply a thin layer of mulch and compost over the soil's surface to prevent weeds.
  3. Sow coneflower seeds as an alternative to buying small plants. Place seeds less than underground—as seeds, coneflowers don't need to be far below the soil's surface. However, seeds need plenty of space to grow, so plant them roughly apart from one other.
    Grow Coneflowers Step 4.jpg
    • Growing coneflowers as plants bought from a nursery is most common, but coneflower seeds are also easy to care for. You can buy them, or collect them from coneflower plants in bloom.
    • Remember that seeds collected from coneflower plants will take 2 years of growth before flowering.[10]
  4. Grow coneflowers inside with a to pot. That may seem big for a pot, but your coneflowers will need room to grow! First, spread crushed gravel across the bottom of the pot for drainage. Then, fill the pot about halfway full with potting soil. Place your coneflower inside the pot so that its roots are an inch below the pot's rim, and then fill it in with soil.[11]
    Grow Coneflowers Step 6 Version 2.jpg
    • Once you're done planting, water the coneflower just like you would if it was in the ground.
    • Make sure that any pot you pick has drainage holes since coneflowers like to live in drier soil.
    • The container's material doesn't matter as much as its size. Coneflowers can handle heat, so even metal is fine.

[Edit]Caring for Coneflowers

  1. Give your coneflowers of water per week. You likely won't have to water the plants manually during weeks of rain. Keep up with weekly watering during dry spells, applying water directly to the base of the coneflower; top-down watering onto its leaves can cause fungal growth.[12]
    Grow Coneflowers Step 8.jpg
    • Because they're drought-resistant, coneflowers don't need to be constantly watered.[13] In fact, they may be damaged if their roots get too soaked.
    • Hybrid species of coneflowers may need more frequent watering to live healthy lives.
  2. Keep the soil free of weeds. Coneflowers don't compete well for nutrients in the soil, so make sure that weeds aren't growing around your flowers and stealing their food. Check your garden regularly throughout the spring and summer, pulling up weeds by their roots as they grow.[14]
    Grow Coneflowers Step 11 Version 2.jpg
    • Apply a thin layer of mulch and compost each spring. This retains moisture and discourages weeds from growing in the area, which will make it easier for you to monitor your coneflowers in the summer.
  3. Spray coneflowers with neem oil to remove pests. Even though coneflowers' spiny stems protect them from deer and other large animals, insects like aphids can still cause problems. Lightly spread neem oil, which can be bought as a spray, onto the surface of your coneflowers. It's an effective and natural insecticide, so it won't hurt your garden.
    Grow Coneflowers Step 9.jpg
  4. Deadhead your coneflowers throughout summer and fall. "Deadheading" is snipping a flower that has already bloomed, so it doesn't devote energy to setting seeds—and instead, the plant produces more flowers. When you see flowers start to wither after blooming during the growing season, remove them from the plant.[15] This will prolong the amount of time your coneflower spends flowering as a whole![16]
    Grow Coneflowers Step 13.jpg
  5. Prune back coneflowers to the ground in late fall or early spring. Once the growing season is finished, either before or after winter, trim back your coneflowers all the way to the ground. Use trimmers to cut it at its base, just above the first leaf.[17] Regardless of when you prune them, your coneflowers will spring right back up when the next growing season comes around!
    Grow Coneflowers Step 14.jpg

[Edit]References

How to Turn Off Silent Mode on iPhone

Posted: 31 May 2022 05:00 PM PDT

Do you need to turn off Silent mode on your iPhone? There are two ways you can do this including using the physical buttons on your phone and creating an AssistiveTouch function. This wikiHow article teaches you how to turn off Silent mode on any iPhone, including iPhone X, 11, 12, and 13.

[Edit]Steps

[Edit]Using Physical Buttons

  1. Flip the switch so the orange isn't showing. You'll find this switch above your volume keys. As long as you don't see orange, Silent mode is off and your phone will ring like normal.[1]
    Turn Off Silent Mode on iPhone Step 1.jpg
    • If you see the orange part of the switch, Silent mode is on and your phone won't ring.
  2. Change the behavior of Silent mode. Go to Settings > Sound & Haptics" or Settings > Sound to change if your phone vibrates while in Silent mode.[2]
    Turn Off Silent Mode on iPhone Step 2.jpg
  3. Enable or disable "Change with Buttons" to change your ringtone and alert sound levels. If, for example, you don't have a ringtone selected, turning off Silent mode will not make your phone ring.
    Turn Off Silent Mode on iPhone Step 3.jpg
    • You can also set ringtones, vibrations, and other sounds in Settings > Sounds & Haptics or Settings > Sounds.

[Edit]Using AssistiveTouch

  1. Open Settings. This app icon features gears on a light grey background.
    Turn Off Silent Mode on iPhone Step 4.jpg
  2. Tap . You may need to scroll down the menu to see this option next to an icon of a person inside a circle.
    Turn Off Silent Mode on iPhone Step 5.jpg
  3. Tap . It's under the "Physical And Motor" header next to an icon of a finger.
    Turn Off Silent Mode on iPhone Step 6.jpg
  4. Tap and tap the switch to toggle it on . A green switch will indicate that the feature is enabled. When you turn on AssistiveTouch, a grey dot will appear on your screen that you will be able to tap for more options, like turning on or off Silent mode.
    Turn Off Silent Mode on iPhone Step 7.jpg
    • Alternatively, you can say "Hey Siri, turn on AssistiveTouch" and skip a few steps that go through menus.
  5. Tap the grey dot on your screen. This will open up the AssistiveTouch menu.
    Turn Off Silent Mode on iPhone Step 8.jpg
  6. Tap . It's the icon that looks like your iPhone.
    Turn Off Silent Mode on iPhone Step 9.jpg
  7. Tap . This is next to a bell icon that either has a line through it or not, depending on if your phone is currently muted. You should see a "Silent Mode Off/On" notification at the top of your screen that confirms your choice in the AssistiveTouch menu.
    Turn Off Silent Mode on iPhone Step 10.jpg
    • Since the AssistiveTouch menu option overrides the physical button, your phone can get confused if you use both. If you're in doubt, restart your phone.
    • If you're using at least iOS 14, you can set AssistiveTouch so you can tap the back of your phone to turn off Silent mode. Go to Settings > Accessibility > Touch > Back Tap to do so.
    • Older iPhones (those not running iOS 14) can instead enable a tap, a double-tap, or a long press on the AssistiveTouch icon to enable and disable Silent mode. To set this up, go to Settings > General > Accessibility > AssistiveTouch and select either "Single-tap", "Double-tap", or "Long Press." Finally, select Mute to indicate that the shortcut should silence your phone.

[Edit]References

[Edit]Quick Summary

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