For fabulous summer colour that keeps on going well into autumn, it’s hard to beat summer annuals. Easy to grow from seed and flowering for months, they’re fantastic value for money and great for filling gaps in borders. Here are four of our favourite summer annuals to sow now:
- Zinnia
- Cosmos
- Nasturtium
- Morning Glory
1. Zinnia
Zinnia are a great addition to the garden with colourful, long-lasting flowers. They have either single, daisy-like, or fancier double flowers in a range of colours. They thrive in warm, sunny conditions and do best in well-drained soil. They also make an excellent cut flower.
Sow indoors in fibre pots that can be transplanted directly into the garden to avoid root disturbance. Place them in a sunny spot and once the frosts have passed they can be transferred to the garden.
2. Cosmos
Cosmos (Cosmos bipinnatus) is a very popular annual that keeps on flowering for months in summer and goes on well into autumn if regularly deadheaded. The daisy-like pink, red or white blooms are a magnet for pollinators and make beautiful cut flowers.
Sow indoors in seed trays filled with seed compost and place in a propagator at 18-25°C, or cover with a clear plastic bag and place on a sunny windowsill to germinate. Once the seedlings are large enough, prick out and transplant into individual small pots. Grow on and plant out once the frosts are over.
3. Nasturtium
Nasturtiums (Tropaeolum majus) can be sown indoors in spring for earlier flowers in summer, or sown directly outdoors in late spring. With their fabulously colourful flowers smothering low mounds of rounded foliage, they look sensational edging borders and vegetable beds, or spilling from containers.
Soak the seeds in water overnight, then sow them 1.5cm deep in small pots filled with multipurpose compost and leave on a sunny windowsill to germinate. Plant out after the last frosts. You can also sow nasturtiums directly outdoors in late spring.
4. Morning Glory
Morning Glory (Ipomoea tricolor) is a twining climber with heart-shaped leaves and beautiful trumpet-shaped flowers in summer. New flowers open in the morning and each one usually lasts just one day, but the plant will keep on flowering all through summer and into early autumn. Vigorous and fast-growing, Morning Glory is perfect for covering a fence or training up a tall obelisk.
Soak the seeds overnight, then sow 6mm deep in individual pots of moist seed compost and place in a propagator or on a sunny windowsill to germinate. Insert thin canes into the pots as supports for the plants to climb up. Harden off and plant out in late spring or early summer.
Growing plants from seed is a great way to fill your garden with flowers, and we have a fantastic range of flower seeds in centre. Visit us today and get sowing!