A large set of packets with popular favorites like marigolds and daisies.
Buyer gets at least 15 varieties. Price is excellent for a broad range. There are precise directions on each envelope. Some people have used the great variety as wedding favors or other unique gifts.
Buyers should read directions carefully to make sure the seeds meet their requirements for sun and shade and time of year.
This bulk pack of wildflower seeds is great for those with wide open spaces or large yards.
Blend of 19 annual and perennial wildflower seeds. Attracts pollinators such as butterflies, bees, or hummingbirds. Pack of 80,000 seeds. Colorful varieties included such as aster, poppies, and coneflowers.
Not all varieties in the mix may be suitable for your climate.
These are a must-have for sunflower lovers, especially those who want a variety in 1 pack that offers an array of sizes and vivid colors.
Bulk, non-GMO sunflower seeds that include more than 15 varieties, with sizes ranging from 1-7 feet in height once mature. Consumers rave about the bold colors and how easy they are to plant.
Some received packages with less than the advertised 1,000 seeds. Not all seeds are likely to sprout, though this is often due to planting conditions.
Choose this if you’re looking for a diverse spread of beautiful annuals and perennials that are easy to grow and attract butterflies for pollination.
Features full-color individual seed packets of Zinnias, Cape Daisies, China Aster, Marigolds, and Rose Mallow. Comes with easy-to-follow instructions on each packet and access to growing tips on the ‘Sow Successful’ blog.
A few reports of the China Aster seeds having germination issues and not sprouting like the other varieties.
These marigold seeds have an impressive germination rate and are easy to plant.
Produces vibrant red, yellow, and orange flowers. Work well to prevent bugs from eating vegetable plants nearby. Pack includes 200 non-GMO seeds. Best for full-sun environments. Blooms in Summer.
These flowers grew much taller than some expected, and the flowers they produced are small.
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A fragrant bouquet of colorful flowers, perfectly arranged — what could be more beautiful? How about if those flowers came from your very own garden, and you witnessed every stage of growth from the first tiny sprout of green right up to the opening blossoms? That’s the joy that awaits you when you start your flower garden from seeds rather than buying a bouquet of cut flowers or growing your own from nursery starts, 4-inch pots, or gallon-size nursery containers.
When choosing flower seeds, a great deal of the decision comes down to the flowers you like best, but if you want a healthy garden rather than the disappointment of seeds that don’t sprout, plants that wither and die, or greenery that never develops blooms, then you need to consider several variables before selecting seeds.
While it’s certainly possible to simply grab a few packets of flower seeds off the nursery rack, toss them into the dirt, water, and hope for the best, it’s better to consider a few variables when choosing seeds.
Garden flowers that can be grown from seed generally fall into two categories: annuals or perennials.
Annuals: These are plants that sprout, grow, bloom, and die within one growing season. Some of the most popular garden flowers are in this category, including marigold, zinnia, impatiens, and snapdragon. While you’ll only get one season of color from these flowers, they bloom fairly quickly — some within just a few weeks of planting — and provide a glorious burst of color right up until cold weather sets in. Note that in the mildest winter climates, some annual flowers do survive through the winter to bloom again the following year. In most areas, though, you’ll need to replant them each year.
Perennials: These are plants that grow slowly and usually don’t flower until their second year, but they come back year after year, so there’s no need to replant them each season. Often, they die down to the ground during the winter and then reemerge in the spring. Popular perennial garden flowers include aster, coreopsis, gaillardia, bee balm, and morning glory. Many gardeners in cold-winter climates prefer to treat perennials like annuals, however, replanting them each season.
The U.S. Department of Agriculture established the Plant Hardiness Zone Map back in the 1960s, with many updates over the years. The map divides the United States into 12 zones based on average low winter temperature, with the higher-numbered zones having the mildest winters. Every package of perennial seeds, and most annuals, indicates which garden zones are best suited to the particular flower, but take heart: you can grow perennials outside their preferred zone, but consider them annuals.
Consider where you’ll be planting your flower seeds and the effect you desire. If you want a hanging basket exploding with beautiful blossoms, you’ll want trailing flowers such as petunia, portulaca, lobelia, vinca, and sweet alyssum. The same flowers work well if your goal is to cover a small patch of ground. Other garden flowers with upright growth patterns, including popular choices like cosmos, zinnia, sunflower, celosia, and marigold, are perfect for garden beds or growing in containers.
Every seed package indicates whether the flowers do best in full sun, part sun, part shade, or full shade. Generally, that breaks down as the following:
You won’t go broke buying flower seeds, which are far more economical than buying nursery starts, 4-inch pots, or gallon containers.
As a general rule, a packet of flower seeds costs between $2 and $3. Depending on seed size, you’ll get 10 to 100 seeds for that price. You can also find larger seed packets, meant for covering large stretches of ground, for anywhere between $5 and $15, depending on the mix of seeds and the brand.
Compare that to a six-pack of nursery starts, which generally costs $2 to $5, a 4-inch single plant, which will run you the same, or a gallon nursery container, which typically sells for $5 to $10 and holds just one plant, although it’s admittedly a well-established and already flowering one.
Before getting a packet of flower seeds, take the time to read all the fine print. Here’s the information most often provided.
Q. Can’t I just harvest seeds from my garden instead of buying seeds?
A. Sometimes. While you often can successfully harvest seeds from your existing garden, if those flowers are a hybridized variety — very common in the gardening world — you might find that planting their seeds leads to flowers that are not quite the same as their parents. Remember as well that to gather flower seeds, you’ll need to leave the blooms in place as they wither and dry. This might not be a big deal in a large flower bed, but it isn’t desirable in a container garden or hanging basket.
Q. What about vegetable seeds?
A. There’s nothing quite like the taste of vegetables grown by you and harvested fresh from your very own backyard. Most of the information given here with regard to choosing flower seeds also applies to vegetables, although you’ll need to follow the seed packet directions more carefully to produce the biggest crop of veggies.
Q. Why do my flower seeds die shortly after sprouting?
A. It’s an unfortunately common scenario: you’re excited to see your seeds sprout and start to grow, but then they collapse and die. While a variety of factors can cause this, the most common is a fungal disease called damping off. Damping off usually strikes when the soil stays too wet and isn’t in a spot with good air circulation. You can’t save seedlings with damping off, but you can help stave off the condition by not overwatering your seedlings, planting them in a spot where the air circulates, not ignoring the sun requirements of the flower, and thinning the seedlings so they aren’t too crowded.
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