Eden Brothers
All Perennial Wildflower Seed Mix - 1 Pound, Mixed, Attracts Pollinators, Attracts Hummingbirds, Easy to Grow & Maintain
All Perennial Wildflower Seed Mix - 1 Pound, Mixed, Attracts Pollinators, Attracts Hummingbirds, Easy to Grow & Maintain
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Brand: Eden Brothers
Color: Mixed
Features:
- These beautiful wildflowers produce amazing and abundant blooms in every color of the rainbow to light up your garden in summer and fall! The All Perennial Wildflower Seed Mix is an all-time customer favorite because it takes such little effort to maintain for the diversity of flowers included.
- This favorite wildflower mix contains many of the most popular perennial wildflowers, including blue flax, perennial lupine, Mexican hat, gloriosa daisy, black eyed Susan, candytuft, gayfeather/blazing star, Maltese cross, and seven more beloved varieties!
- This hardworking All Perennial Wildflower Seed Mix attracts hummingbirds and pollinators, and is a cinch to grow and maintain. Plant it in small gardens or huge meadows for seasons of enjoyment. Sit back, relax, and let Mother Nature do the rest!
- Growing wildflowers from seed couldn't be easier. Plant in the spring or fall, and in the second growing season you'll be amazed at the amount of blooms in colors so vibrant and movie-screen worthy: red, pink, yellow, white, and purple blooms of all shapes and sizes. They love full sun and can be planted in all zones in North America. Water them when the soil is dry, cut off dead flowers to encourage growth, and that's it! So easy.
- Eden Brothers offers the highest quality perennial wildflower seed mixes and over 2,000 other varieties of flower, vegetable, and herb seeds, and flower bulbs. Hundreds of heirloom, organic, and award-winning varieties are also available. Have confidence knowing your garden comes from non-GMO products and 100% pure seed without fillers, all from a US-based gardening company.
- Mix includes Siberian Wallflower, Shasta Daisy, Lance Leaf Coreopsis, Sweet William, Foxglove, Purple Coneflower, Blanket Flower, Blue Flax, Perennial Lupine, Mexican Hat, Gloriosa Daisy, Black Eyed Susan, Candytuft, Gayfeather/Blazing Star, Maltese Cross
Part Number: SMCAT112
Details: All PerennialWildflower Seed MixIf your plan is to sit back and let Mother Nature do her thing, then this is probably the wildflower mix for you. Once youve done the proper soil prep and sowed the seed, youre done! Our All - Perennial Wildflower Seed Mix contains many of the most beloved perennial wildflowers including Lupine, Flax, Coreopsis, and Shasta Daisy. Suitable for all regions of North America. | All Perennial Wildflower Seed Mix - 1 Pound, Mixed
Package Dimensions: 7.4 x 7.3 x 2.1 inches
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Wild Flower Frenzy
A lot of individuals say they've no luck at all with such a garden. It isn't a question of luck, but a question of discernment, for wild flowers are like individuals and each has its personality. What plant life has been accustomed to in Nature it wants all of the time. In point of fact, when withdrawn from its own kind of living conditions, it sickens and fails. That's enough to tell us that we should copy Nature herself. Imagine you're tracking down wild flowers. As you Pick certain flowers, observe the soil they're in, the place, conditions, the environment, and the neighbors.
Imagine you discover dog's-tooth violets and anemones growing near together. Then put them so in your own garden. You get the point, right? If you want wild flowers to grow in your garden make them feel at home. Trick them into believing that they're still in their native environment.
Wild flowers should to be transplanted when blooming time is over. Carry a trowel and a basket into the forest with you. As you scoop up a couple of columbine, or a liverleaf, make sure along with the roots you get some of the plant's own soil, which must be used when replanted.
The bed these plants are to go into had better be prepared cautiously before getting the plants. Don’t bring the plants back to hold off over a day or night before setting them in the ground. They should be planted at once. The flower bed needs soil from the forest, deep and rich and replete of leaf mold. The sub- drainage system should be first-class. Some individuals believe that all forest plants ought to have soil drenched with water. But the forest themselves are not soggy. It might be that you'll need to dig your garden up really deeply and position some stone in the bottom then top soil and on top put the rich dirt you took from the forest.
Prior to planting water the dirt well. Then as you create holes for the plants put some of the forest soil in each.
Flower types and when they're available:
It's quite nice plan to have a wild flower garden  that provides a sequence of blooms from early springtime to late autumn; so let us kickoff with March, liverleaf, Claytonia lanceolata and saxifrage. Then arrives April turning out in its arms the beautiful aquilege, the tiny bluets and Geranium maculatum. For May there are the dog's-tooth violet and the Anemone nemorosa, Solomon's seal, Arisaema atrorubens, wake robin, bloodroot and violets. June will impart the campanula, flannel leaf, bee balm and foxglove. I'd pick the gay butterfly weed for July. Let turtle head, aster, purple boneset, and Daucus carota make the rest of the season brilliant till frost.



