Hi everyone, I hope you are all staying safe.
I dug out some sunflower seeds from a bird seed mix and sowed them just for a little fun. I figured if they germinated I could dot them around and enjoy their visual appeal, and then just leave them for the birdies to nibble on the seeds.
They seem to be doing very well, and during this sudden burst of hot, sunny weather we are currently experiencing, I've been setting them outside each day so that they experience a little wind and hopefully grow more durable stems.
I'm assuming I cannot attach images until I've posted more, so I'll try to describe as best I can.
They are in regular 3-4" wide pots, about 6" deep. The sunflowers themselves are roughly 6-7" tall with eight developed leaves and clustering growth at the tips. The leaves look healthy. I have no idea what type of sunflower they are. The seeds were completely black, rather than being black with lighter off white stripes down them (my common perception when I think of sunflower seeds). I don't really know anything.
So, my question is, what do I do with them at this stage?
I looked at the MET's long term projections and, naturally, they say light frosts may happen. How hardy are sunflowers once they seem to be well established?
Any personal experience, anecdotes, tried methods etc... would be much appreciated. I live in the Midlands, if that helps.
Regards
P.S.
I'm trying my hand at the three sisters approach of corn, climbing beans/peas and squash in one area. I thought about throwing in sunflowers that grow tall, but read they can be a negative influence on beans. Any first hand knowledge on that would also be very cool.
I dug out some sunflower seeds from a bird seed mix and sowed them just for a little fun. I figured if they germinated I could dot them around and enjoy their visual appeal, and then just leave them for the birdies to nibble on the seeds.
They seem to be doing very well, and during this sudden burst of hot, sunny weather we are currently experiencing, I've been setting them outside each day so that they experience a little wind and hopefully grow more durable stems.
I'm assuming I cannot attach images until I've posted more, so I'll try to describe as best I can.
They are in regular 3-4" wide pots, about 6" deep. The sunflowers themselves are roughly 6-7" tall with eight developed leaves and clustering growth at the tips. The leaves look healthy. I have no idea what type of sunflower they are. The seeds were completely black, rather than being black with lighter off white stripes down them (my common perception when I think of sunflower seeds). I don't really know anything.
So, my question is, what do I do with them at this stage?
I looked at the MET's long term projections and, naturally, they say light frosts may happen. How hardy are sunflowers once they seem to be well established?
Any personal experience, anecdotes, tried methods etc... would be much appreciated. I live in the Midlands, if that helps.
Regards
P.S.
I'm trying my hand at the three sisters approach of corn, climbing beans/peas and squash in one area. I thought about throwing in sunflowers that grow tall, but read they can be a negative influence on beans. Any first hand knowledge on that would also be very cool.
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