Whilst Meadowmat Wildflower Turf is the fastest way to establish a wildflower meadow; plants, bulbs and seeds can help you customise your wildflower meadow as well add an extra dimension to the planting in your garden. Planned carefully you can enjoy colour and variety all year round whilst your seasonal wildflowers can be bolstered by spring-flowering bulbs or your favourite flowers year after year. With the option of seeds, bulbs or plants you can also decide whether you want instant colour, the anticipation of colour to come or the joy of creating your own seedlings. If your especially confident take the chance to grow your flowers from seed and watch them germinate and grow.
We can’t deny that there is a built-in satisfaction to creating your own plants from seed. We would also be the first to recognise that growing from seed needs more knowledge and starting from scratch can be a little more intimidating. When to plant, how deep, when to plant out….It all demands a little more. Admittedly, it will also take some patience and the belief that something will come up – but just wait. It will happen.
Of course, the best way is to adopt all three. Plants will bring an instant hit of colour and diversity to your garden. Bulbs can then follow up with new plants later in the season and seeds will bring the extra satisfaction and give you work to do in the garden whilst the others mature.
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Agrostemma githago is a softly hairy annual, With beautifully intricate reddish – purple flowers.
Centaurea cyanus. Well known in gardens in various colour forms. Has bright blue flowers.
Also known as Queen Anne's lace. White umbrella-like clusters of white flowers.
Primula veris. Gay and beloved, becoming scarce, fragrant deep yellow flower. Likes Damp meadows.
Ranunculus repens. Very common in damp places, ditches and flooded areas also likes woodland areas.
Cynosurus Cristatus. A choice plant with purple flowers and mounds of broadly divided leaves. A good plant for the shady border or woodland areas.
Sheep's Fescue forms dense tufts or clumps of fine-textured, blue-green foliage, which can reach a height of around 10 to 30 centimetres (4 to 12 inches).
Cardamine pratensis. Often known as Lady's smock. Plant of damp meadows and stream banks. Lovely lilac/white flowers.
Attractive bright yellow – green tufted sedge, drooping sausage shaped flowers.
Hesperis matronalis. Purple or white flowers which become very fragrant towards the evening, looks good in a border and attracts butterflies.
Taraxacum officinale. A golden blaze in the May meadows and banks. Basal rosettes of leaves deeply lobed or toothed (dent de lion), flowers are composed of bright yellow ray florets.
A lovely plant – A rosette of leaves throws up a spike of rich yellow flowers with orange anthers, grow in herbaceous border.
Dianthus armeria. Bright pink flowers over dark green leaves.
The best butterfly plant. Round blue-purple flowers with purple anthers.
Beautiful, elegant and robust Double Snowdrops produce double, dainty, nodding white flowers from February to March. Plant in dappled shade or in an alpine garden and enjoy. Pack Size: 25 bulbs per pack
Filipendula vulgaris. Finely cut leaflets in a basal rosette, foamy cream coloured flowers open from pink buds.
Our favourite spring wildflower that will fill your garden with fragrant and vibrant blue-violet flowers from April to June. Pack Size: 25 bulbs per pack
Oenothera biennis. Biennial with large scented flowers (7cm across) on tall spikes loved by moths. Excellent for the back of a summer border.
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