Published Sunday, July 5, 2009, OK personal/derivative use; link lovethatimage.artsquadgraphics.com.
Sweetpeas bouquet and growing tips
The little plants I showed you a week or so ago are going gangbusters. Sweetpeas like to be picked, you know, so I must pick bouquets with fragrance like no other to enchant me and give away. What else can I do?
Here’s how to raise great sweetpeas: 1) You must nick the seed with nail scissors, then soak overnight in a dish of water before planting. The seeds are big and pretty easy to handle and it really doesn’t take long. You will see that the nicked ones swell and are ready to go and the ones that didn’t get the outside casing pierced sit there, small and hard.
2) Plant as directed, indoors in early spring if you want.
3) When planting outdoors, put them in a place where heat will not be a problem if possible. An eastern exposure like these have helps. But the big thing is, sweetpeas love manure. When planting, dig a double handful of bagged steer manure into the soil around each one. Then wait patiently for heaven in a flower to appear.
For more floriferous photos, visit Flowers For Today. Everyone likes flowers!
And hello to the Color Carnival crew. We all love bright colors; such a happy feeling.
Ilana-Davita on 05 Jul 2009 at 11:25 am #
Wonderful array of colors!
Denise on 05 Jul 2009 at 11:29 am #
Hi Sara, you have made me very happy. Your photo is gorgeous and I loved the info on how to grow Sweetpeas. I grew up with them in my father’s garden and I loved it when my mum picked them and brought them inside. Their scent was incredible. Thank you very much for sharing this. Great post!
Sara L. Chapman on 05 Jul 2009 at 11:47 am #
You have made my day. You are welcome!
Tammie on 05 Jul 2009 at 1:05 pm #
Oh my this is sweet as sweet gets!
And I know they smell divine too.
SandyCarlson on 05 Jul 2009 at 1:32 pm #
Oh, these are wonderful. I love the colors.
naturegirl on 05 Jul 2009 at 4:17 pm #
Sara: I love sweet peas! I recieved a packet of seeds from a German blogging friend last winter ..they are perennial pink!! Yes I said perennial…however I did NOT get a chance to plant them..I wonder if it’s too late to follow your tips on growing sweet peas!
Love the mix of color in yours!! Have a wonderful day in your garden! hugs NG
SquirrelQueen on 05 Jul 2009 at 6:44 pm #
That is such a wonderful mix of colors, I just had to smile when I opened your page. Beautiful.
Have a wonderful week.
Arija on 05 Jul 2009 at 9:31 pm #
Your Sweet Peas are a dream!. Thanks for the scoring and soaking tip. Since we only just got out first winter rains and have been dry since last spring, it was useless to plant them on St.Patrik’s Day which is the normal rule here, so they greninate in autimn, establish a root system in winter and take off like rockets in early spring. Ah the vagueries of climate.
mstoastburner on 06 Jul 2009 at 10:49 am #
Great info! Copy and saved (for when I ever get some gardening space again).
🙂
storyteller's other blog on 06 Jul 2009 at 11:27 am #
I love Sweetpeas … they remind me of my childhood ;–)
Yours are lovely and colorful.
Hugs and blessings,
Valkyrien on 06 Jul 2009 at 2:52 pm #
Sweetpeas remind me of my childhood also! They are so lovely! Great photo – and info!
Wish you a great week!
Luiz Santilli Jr. on 06 Jul 2009 at 7:06 pm #
Sara
Wonderful bouquet.
Marvelous flowers and colors!
Thanks for posting for TODAY’S FLOWERS every week.
Luiz
Martha on 07 Jul 2009 at 5:12 am #
How beautiful! I love all the color! Thanks for playing Sara! 🙂
speakuplibrarian on 08 Jul 2009 at 5:23 am #
Gorgeous.
lormikant on 13 Jul 2009 at 8:07 am #
I love sweet peas, but I have lots of small black bugs on them, I have tried shaking them after picking, spraying with water, and even putting the blooms under gently running water, but I still see the little devils climbing up the kitchen window, any ideas.
Sara L. Chapman on 13 Jul 2009 at 8:17 am #
I wish I knew. One really low-toxic way to fight bugs is with a soap spray. You mix diluted soap or mild dish detergent in a spray bottle and spray the bugs and it does help with aphids and some others, so it’s worth a try. For hard gardening questions, I’d try davesgarden.com and see if someone there knows more.
But the main advice regarding bugs is to keep your plants super healthy with plenty of water and manure, and have birds in your yard to eat the bugs!