Garden News (UK)

Sow easy blooms for summer

Fill your borders with flowers without breaking the bank by growing from seed

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Perennials include some of our bestloved plants and are great value, flowering every year with minimal care. But buying enough to fill a border can be expensive so it’s worth growing some from seed. Most can be sown throughout spring and summer but, for a chance of flowers in the first year, they must be sown in early spring.

They’re ideal if you don’t have a heated greenhouse because most don’t need extra warmth to grow once seeds have germinated. When buying seeds look out for those listed as flowering in the first year because a few don’t bloom until plants have experience­d a cold winter. These include most foxgloves and sweet Williams and aquilegias. Among the easiest to grow for flowers the first year are agastache, achilleas, hollyhocks, delphinium­s, dianthus, lavender, monarda, Iceland poppies, penstemon, platycodon, verbena and verbascum.

Most don’t need high heat to germinate and 15C (60F) is usually sufficient. Use clean, multipurpo­se compost for seed sowing and clean trays and pots to prevent fungal diseases.

Once they’ve been transplant­ed they should be kept free from frost but can withstand cooler temperatur­es than most bedding plants. They can then be planted out in spring, before tender bedding plants.

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