...or in gardens where seedlings get eaten before they have a chance to establish.
The annuals like Californian, welsh and opium poppies all grow fairly easily from seed just scattered as Chloe suggests. And once you have them you'll probably always have them, though not always the same colour or in the same place. Perennials such as the oriental poppies don't always come true from seed. You could throw annual poppy seed down now and chances are some would come up next spring (that is basically how the self seeded ones happen, after all) but you'll probably get more if you wait til spring - not as many will be eaten by birds or rot in the wet over winter.
“Light thinks it travels faster than anything but it is wrong. No matter how fast light travels, it finds the darkness has always got there first”
Sow the seeds in a deliberate shape - a V or a cross - and mark it with a nice big label. Anything that grows out of line is a weed. You'll get some weeds in amongst most likely but you can take those out once the seedlings are a bit bigger and you'll be able to see the difference
“Light thinks it travels faster than anything but it is wrong. No matter how fast light travels, it finds the darkness has always got there first”
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...or in gardens where seedlings get eaten before they have a chance to establish.
The annuals like Californian, welsh and opium poppies all grow fairly easily from seed just scattered as Chloe suggests. And once you have them you'll probably always have them, though not always the same colour or in the same place. Perennials such as the oriental poppies don't always come true from seed. You could throw annual poppy seed down now and chances are some would come up next spring (that is basically how the self seeded ones happen, after all) but you'll probably get more if you wait til spring - not as many will be eaten by birds or rot in the wet over winter.
If these are the native Papaver rhoeas I'd sow them now where you want them to flower. It's what the plants are doing
Last edited: 18 September 2016 21:14:55
In the sticks near Peterborough
Thanks for ur replies.. bit of a newb question... But if I sow them by seed now..how do I know what is a poppy and what is a weed in spring???
i guess I only really have 1 weed in my garden and that is annual Mercury.. But how do u know what is a weed or flower??
Sow the seeds in a deliberate shape - a V or a cross - and mark it with a nice big label. Anything that grows out of line is a weed. You'll get some weeds in amongst most likely but you can take those out once the seedlings are a bit bigger and you'll be able to see the difference