
Perennials are an all season adventure: we anticipate them breaking through the ground in the spring, enjoy their flowers and foliage, and watch their skeletons after frost. Our listing includes old-fashioned standards that are familiar from our grandparent’s gardens as well as the newest varieties from seed breeders. A wonderful advancement is first year blooming perennials. There is a large selection of perennials that grow quickly and easily from seed, blooming beautifully the first season. Many of these are compact enough to live in containers for patio gardening. A note about zones: the zones listed here are approximations. Information on Canadian plant hardiness zones can be found at: Natural Resources Canada www.nrcan-rncan.gc.ca. We encourage you to experiment and speak with other gardeners in your area about the growing habits of plants to determine their hardiness. The factors that influence this are snow cover, wind patterns, proximity to other plants and trees, and the winter conditions each year.
M = 1000; Sds = Seeds; Gm = Grams; Pel = Pellets
What does Multi-seed Pellet mean? A clay-based pellet with approx. 3 to 5 seeds inside. Keep the growing medium consistently moist so that the pellet melts and seed can germinate. Do not separate the plants as they grow: transplant together as a clump, which is the normal growing pattern for multi-seed pellet plant types.