Nigella

Quick Blooming Flowers To Grow From Seed

Flower seed packets rarely list estimated days to maturity, but most annual flowers need about 95 days from seed to flower. These ones are blooming in 60 to 70 days when grown under spring conditions, and they also tolerate light frost. To get a head start on the season, start seeds indoors under lights in late winter, and use cloches to ease the plants’ adjustment to outdoor conditions.

1.Sweet alyssum

Annual sweet alyssum (Lobularia maritima) is a favorite of hoverflies and numerous other small beneficial insects, and the low-growing plants are perfect for softening the edges of beds and containers or growing along a walkway. Fragrance varies with variety, and it is always strongest in the evening.

2.Calendula

Calendula has a long history of use as a skin-healing herb, or you can use dried calendula petals as a saffron substitute in cooking. These fast-growing flowers have broader leaves than many other species, so they fill in quickly and can even be used as a flowering cover crop.

3.Johnny Jump-ups

Violas, mini-pansies, field pansies or Johnny jump-ups, these quick-blooming flowers laugh at frost. Johnny jump-ups partner beautifully with spring-flowering bulbs, and they are enthusiastic re-seeders.

4.Nigella

Nigella damascene, commonly called love-in-a-mist, features lovely pastel flowers framed by lacy foliage, which mature into exotic seed pods for dried arrangements. The determined plants grow steadily in cool spring weather and start blooming in early summer. Feathery nigella foliage looks great softening the base of a fence, and it’s an excellent neighbor for taller flowers.

See also: The most common mistakes in flower care

5.Nasturtiums

The tastiest of all edible flowers, nasturtiums attract bees and other pollinators, and they are popular for interplanting with cucumbers or tomatoes to deter pests. Nasturtium leaves and flowers contain an abundance of vitamin C and other nutrients. When pickled in a salt brine, immature nasturtium seed capsules taste like capers.

6.Annual Phlox

Annual phlox (Phlox drummondii) is a hardy annual, native to Texas, that has been bred into a beautiful cut flower. Butterflies seek out the nectar-rich flowers, and new blossoms keep coming despite early season heat waves or dry spells.

7.Petunias

Pest resistant and easy to please, petunias can be had in endless colors, or you can grow them for their fragrance. Heirloom strains like ‘Old Fashioned Vining Petunia’ emit a lily-like perfume at dusk, as does award-winning ‘Evening Scentsation’, which blooms in a goes-with-everything shade of blue.

8.Poppies

The fastest poppies to grow in spring, California poppies (Eschscholzia californica) can grow from seed to bloom in only 60 days. Breadseed poppies (Papaver somniferum), also known as opium poppies, are also worth a try as long as you get a prompt start by sowing the seed over cold soil.

Getting poppies established in your garden is only challenging the first year because the plants re-seed so successfully. Once established, these quick-blooming flowers provide bees and other pollinators with protein-rich pollen in early summer, when little else is in bloom.

Source: www.growveg.com

Post Author: Igor

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