Mexican Daisy is a low-growing woody perennial with gray-green leaves and a long blooming season. Small daisy-like flowers are in continuous bloom from early summer until fall, which opens as white, turn pink, and then fade into a purple cast as they mature. The abundant flowers are excellent pollination and butterfly attractors. Drought tolerant when established.
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 Type:  | 
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 Height:  | 
 0.5' - 1'  | 
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 Spread:  | 
 2’ - 3’  | 
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 Spacing:  | 
 2’  | 
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 USDA Hardiness Zone:  | 
 6 - 9  | 
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 Culture:  | 
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 Bloom Color:  | 
 White/Pink/Purple  | 
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 Season of Interest:  | 
MAINTENANCE NEEDS: Low Maintenance Plant. Water regularly, do not let the soil dry out in summer. Self-seeding, it can spread aggressively.
LANDSCAPE USES: Accents or Group Plantings, Borders, Naturalized Areas, Rock Gardens, Native Gardens, Wall Plantings, and Containers.
COMPANION PLANTS: Lavander Cotton, Shasta Daisy, Stonecrop
IMAGES: Hectonichus, Asteraceae - Erigeron karvinskianus, CC BY-SA 3.0, (2) David Short from Windsor, UK, Erigeron karvinskianus (SG) (29875681634), CC BY 2.0, (3) Robert Flogaus-Faust, Erigeron karvinskianus RF, CC BY 4.0, (4) B.navez, Erigeron karvinskianus RouteDuVolcan 1, CC BY-SA 3.0
*As plants have ranges in appearance they may not appear as the images shown.