Cold Weather Annuals
We’ve all seen them at the garden center, gracing the tables and shelves when nothing else is in season: the pansies, flowering kales, primroses, and violas.
The list of cold weather annuals is long, including care free plants whose volunteer seeds sprout in the garden a lot sooner than their greenhouse grown counterparts.
Snapdragons, pot marigolds, celosias, petunias, sweet alyssum, larkspur, nasturtiums, sweet peas, forget-me-nots, cornflowers and poppies thrive in cool sunny weather and don’t mind a few frosts.
They slow down when summer comes, because they dislike heat, but are often prompted into a second flush of bloom once weather cools down in the fall.
The seed packets recommend starting these plants indoors, six weeks before the last frost, or sowing them directly outdoors as soon as the dirt can be worked.
In my experience, they fare best when sown in the fall, their seeds can safely overwinter in the ground. This is what nature programmed them to do, after all.




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