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Ageratum Hawaii Mixed Color - Flower Seeds

Ageratum Hawaii Mixed Color - Flower Seeds

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Regular price $9.99 Sale price $19.99
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Ageratum  Hawaii Mixed Color - Flower Seeds

Ageratum Hawaii Mixed Color - Flower Seeds

Regular price $9.99
Regular price $9.99 Sale price $19.99
SAVE 50% Sold out
Large plants with big fluffy blue/purple flowers. You will be impressed with their performance. Grows quickly & easily to form mounds of fresh looking foliage and produce generous quantities of soft fluffy flowers arranged in clusters atop nice sturdy long stems. Which makes them ideal for cut flowers. These plants are covered with blossoms nearly all summer and well into fall. They look like a soft carpet. They grow 8-12 inches tall. Ideal for edgings and containers. Full sun to partial shade, heat tolerant and need moderate watering. They re-seed, but behave themselves and will not take over your garden.
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Beginner's Gardening Guide

The three most essential elements for seed germination are:
Water: Allows the seed to absorb moisture, activates enzymes, and breaks dormancy
Suitable temperature: A suitable temperature is necessary to initiate growth
Oxygen: Respiration requires oxygen, which provides energy.
Some plants may also have light requirements, but the first three are essential.

⭐The Before You Sow Checklist

Preparation makes all the difference. Get these basics sorted before you sow, and you'll avoid most common pitfalls.

Don’t use garden soil in containers—it compacts when wet, contains weeds, pests and diseases. Choose seed-sowing or quality multipurpose compost instead.We suggest a fine, free-draining, low-nutrient peat-free medium (young seedlings don’t need feeding).

For outdoor sowing, loosen soil to a fine tilth, rake level, and water the day before if dry.

💡How to Sow Seeds Indoors

Indoor sowing lets you start earlier and control conditions easily. Fill containers with compost, level it gently without compacting, then water well and drain.

Sow 2–3 seeds per cell or scatter thinly in trays as directed. Cover lightly with compost/vermiculite (or leave uncovered if light is needed). Label with plant name and sowing date.

Ideal for crops sensitive to root disturbance, such as carrots, parsnips, peas and beans. Prepare fine soil, make shallow drills, sow thinly, cover lightly and water gently. Thin seedlings when they develop true leaves.

📢How to Sow Seeds Outdoors

Ideal for crops sensitive to root disturbance, such as carrots, parsnips, peas and beans. Prepare fine soil, make shallow drills, sow thinly, cover lightly and water gently. Thin seedlings when they develop true leaves.

Pricking Out🌱

When seedlings have true leaves, transplant them into larger pots to avoid overcrowding.Fill pots with fresh compost, make a hole, and water seedlings first for easier lifting.

Lift them gently by the leaves (not stems) and firm compost around roots.Bury leggy seedlings (e.g., tomatoes) up to their lowest leaves.Water lightly and keep out of direct sun for a few days.

Common Problems

Seeds won't germinate: This could be due to using old seeds, incorrect temperature, sowing too deeply, or the compost drying out.
Leggy seedlings: This is a result of insufficient light. Move to a brighter spot, use grow lights or try planting deeper when transplanting.

🍃Hardening Off & Planting Out

Indoor-grown plants need hardening off to adapt outdoors.Place them outside in a sheltered spot by day for a week, bring in at night, then gradually leave them out overnight over another week.
Plant on a mild, cloudy day. Dig holes bigger than root balls, firm gently, water well. Protect from slugs and frost with fleece.
For continuous harvests, try succession sowing: sow small batches of quick-growing crops every 2–3 weeks.

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