Free: 100 Heirloom Hollyhock Seeds !!!!! - Gardening Seeds & Bulbs - Listia.com Auctions for Free Stuff

FREE: 100 Heirloom Hollyhock Seeds !!!!!

100 Heirloom Hollyhock Seeds !!!!!
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Description

The listing, 100 Heirloom Hollyhock Seeds !!!!! has ended.

The ultimate cottage garden choice, hollyhock sends up tall spires that cover themselves in flowers in beautiful colors. They're easy to grow from seed -- in fact, that's usually the only way they are found in garden centers.

Most hollyhocks are biennials, that is, they grow only foliage the first year, flower the second, and die that fall. However, if you establish a stand of hollyhocks, they'll reseed each year so there will always be plenty blooming. Interestingly, the flowers open from the bottom to the top of the spike throughout the summer.

These tall (up to 8 feet) beauties are ideal against fences or buildings where they can get natural support. Red forms are especially attractive to hummingbirds and butterflies.

Light:
Sun
Zones:
3-8
Plant Type:
Perennial
Plant Height:
3-8 feet tall
Plant Width:
1-3 feet wide
Flower Color:
A broad range of flower colors available from red to pink, apricot, yellow, lavender, purple, and near black, depending on variety
Bloom Time:
Blooms early to midsummer
Landscape Uses:
Containers,Beds & Borders
Special Features:
Flowers,Cut Flowers,Attracts Hummingbirds,Attracts Butterflies,Easy to Grow

The Hollyhock, first brought to this country from China, was once eaten as a pot-herb, though it is not particularly palatable.

Its flowers are employed medicinally for their emollient, demulcent and diuretic properties, which make them useful in chest complaints. Their action is similar to Marshmallow.

Sow the seeds outside about a week before last frost. If you are planting seedlings out, wait about 2 – 3 weeks after last frost. Hollyhock seeds only need to be planted right below the soil, no more than 1/4 of an inch deep. Hollyhock plants should be about 2 feet apart to grow well.

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Mail-out Date: February 22nd
Questions & Comments
Original
Nice! F&W! <3
Feb 11th, 2013 at 3:39:04 AM PST by
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Thank you! These and my Hummingbird, or Trumpet, Vine are pretty popular. I have several listings for the Hollyhocks posted right now (see my profile), but am fast nearing the end of the seeds I can offer for this year... gotta save some for me, too! They do come back each year, but I've got a 40 acre "yard" to landscape a little bit more each year.
Feb 11th, 2013 at 7:15:39 AM PST by
Original
how long do they usualy take to grow?
Feb 11th, 2013 at 9:06:44 AM PST by
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Well, that depends. If you plant them right away in a greenhouse, you may be able to trick them into blooming when you transplant to your sunny location in the Spring. For that matter, if you live in an area where the ground isn't frozen, and since they've had Winter conditions already here, you can look for Spring growth. Without a bit of "fooling them," the plants grown from seed will generally reach 4-8' the first Spring/Summer, but will wait until the second year to give you the quantities of bloom that are so impressive. One of my favorite "How To" sites for growing Hollys from seed is: http://www.wikihow.com/Grow-Hollyhocks
The only thing I'd disagree with in what they write is that they die after two years. I live in a place with all four seasons (in fact we had some road closures to snow today!), and I've seen them go three and even four years if cut back and mulched properly (straw is an amazing thing!!!)..
Feb 11th, 2013 at 5:40:58 PM PST by
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Fanned & frantically bidding!
Feb 11th, 2013 at 5:35:49 PM PST by
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LoL! You needn't be QUITE so frantic ... take a look at my profile and see what there is still coming up ..... shhhh, I didn't say that!
Feb 11th, 2013 at 5:42:44 PM PST by
Original
You should have our crazy weather. I was told by a nursery that it's not to late to plant spring blooming bulbs. In Missouri, one day it's below freezing and a couple days later it's almost 60.
Feb 11th, 2013 at 5:57:47 PM PST by

100 Heirloom Hollyhock Seeds !!!!! is in the Home & Garden | Gardening | Gardening Seeds & Bulbs category