Summer seed saving: A Master Gardener shares tips on wildflower propagation

Lois McNamara has been growing wildflowers for more than two decades, but she still remembers the species that endeared her to the hobby: blue larkspur.

Lois McNamara
Master Gardener Volunteer Lois McNamara cuts the seed heads off of cutleaf coneflower in the IFAS Extension Alachua County garden. (Photo by Cat Wofford, UF/IFAS)

“My daughter brought me seeds one year and threw them in a flowerbed, and the result was so beautiful that I wanted to do that, too,” said McNamara, a Master Gardener Volunteer with UF/IFAS Extension Alachua County.

Summer is an ideal time for Florida green thumbs undeterred by heat and rain to collect wildflower seeds for showy displays next year. Below, McNamara answers common questions about the practice.

Q. What wildflower species should seed collectors target during the summer?

A. While many of the wildflower species known for blooming along Florida roadsides in the spring have already gone to seed, summer bloomers like cutleaf coneflower, blanket flower and beach sunflower are all still growing and available.

Q. When and how are wildflower seeds typically harvested?

A. You can tell a wildflower is ready for harvesting when the seed head, the top part of the flower that has bloomed, turns brown. You can cut off the head, but often it’s possible to simply pull it off with your hands.

Q. How do you recommend separating the seeds?

A. If you shake the seed head of some wildflowers, the head will fall apart and reveal the seeds. With other wildflowers, you have to really work at the head with your fingers. If somebody’s going to get into seed saving for the long term, it’s worth having some sort of sieve. When I started, I ordered sieves from a mining company, and those fit perfectly along the rim of a 5-gallon bucket. You can also use colanders. One of my friends uses a sand-sifting toy for children.

Tickseed
McNamara displays seeds harvested from an Indian blanket flower. (Photo by Cat Wofford, UF/IFAS)

Q. What is the best way to preserve seeds?

A. Before storing seeds, you need to ensure they are dry, so they don’t mold. If you keep them on paper in a house with air conditioning for about a month, that should do it. Afterward, if you’re going to use them next year, you can store them in a clear glass jar or in envelopes. For long-term storage, dark glass is recommended and preferable to plastic.

Q. When is the best time to plant the seeds collected now?

A. Cutleaf coneflower, blanket flower and beach sunflower are best sown in the fall between late October and mid-December. But optimal planting times depend on the species. In general, wildflower seeds can be sown in North Florida between mid-September and mid-October and in Central Florida from mid-October until the end of December.

Q. Can you describe the recommended planting method?

A. Work the soil very lightly; You don’t have to have all the vegetation up. If you have bahia grass in your yard, for example, you can mow it very closely, rake off the vegetation and then scatter the seeds and step on them. The seeds need exposure to the sun, they need good contact with the soil, and they need some water, and hopefully nature provides that. If not, you can provide it once a week.

For more information or to schedule an interview, please contact Megan Winslow at winslow@ufl.edu.

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The mission of the University of Florida Institute of Food and Agricultural Sciences (UF/IFAS) is to develop knowledge relevant to agricultural, human and natural resources and to make that knowledge available to sustain and enhance the quality of human life. With more than a dozen research facilities, 67 county Extension offices, and award-winning students and faculty in the UF College of Agricultural and Life Sciences, UF/IFAS brings science-based solutions to the state’s agricultural and natural resources industries, and all Florida residents.
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Megan Winslow
Posted: July 31, 2024


Category: Community Volunteers, Horticulture, UF/IFAS, UF/IFAS Extension, Work & Life
Tags: Beach Sunflower, Blanket Flower, Blue Larkspur, Cat Wofford, Coreopsis, Cutleaf Coneflower, Extension, Garden, Gardening, Hobby, Horticulture, IFAS, Institute Of Food And Agricultural Sciences, Lois McNamara, Master Gardener Volunteer, Megan Winslow, MGV, Seed, Seed Saving, Summer, Tickseed, UF, UF/IFAS, UF/IFAS Extension, UF/IFAS Extension Alachua County, University Of Florida, Wildflower


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