Kismet Intense Orange Coneflower

Halq’emeylem Name

Currently unknown

Latin Name

Echinacea Kismet Intense Orange

About Kismet Intense Orange Coneflower

Kismet Intense Orange Coneflower is a large fragrant plant with its sunflower-like purple rays overlapping a vibrant orange cone, they bloom during July to August. Many gardens around British Columbia have grown these plants because of its properties of giving a wonderful presence of life into any garden, it is a great addition for its vibrant color. AG 

Connections

Shakespeare

Its shape is daisy-like and there are many daisies in Shakespeare, some associated with troubled emotional states, others with lightheartedness.   

Daisies may suggest springtime joy, as “daisies pied, and violets blue…/do paint the meadows with delight” [Love’s Labours Lost]), or youthful freshness and innocence. Daisies are included in Ophelia’s language of flowers (in Hamlet), where they are commonly seen as referring to “self-sacrifice for love,” as well as “dissembling love and the folly of believing such deceits” (Painter and Parker).  

Daisies are associated with Alcestis, a figure in Greek drama and story. She is a sacrificial wife who agrees to die in place of her husband and then returns from the land of the dead.  In Shakespeare’s Winter’s Tale, a wife symbolically returns from the dead in an act of reconciliation.  Much has been lost, but her return is an act of hope.  

We planted orange flowers for the 215, in memory and to honour the children.

 

Indigenous Knowledge

Every Child Matters.  Orange for 215.  See echinacea purpurea for medicinal uses.

Gallery

References

Images: Yukun Lin/ perennials.comŁukasz Rawa | Kaarina Dillabough

Retrieved July 2021 from the Integrated Taxonomic Information System (ITIS) on-line database, www.itis.gov, CC0 https://doi.org/10.5066/F7KH0KBK

Painter, Robert, and Brian Parker (1994). Ophelia’s Flowers Again. Notes and Queries 41 (1), 42-44.