Gardeners who want to grow their own transplants of winter flowers, particularly tall rather than dwarf varieties or single colors rather than mixed, should plant seeds of cool-season flowers now. Plant in flats, small pots, or peat pots. If you can't find the seeds you want locally, use seed catalogues. A few varieties may be sold out, but most are available and delivery service is quite fast.
To grow stock be sure to disinfect flats and fill them with sterilized potting soil. Place the seeds on top of the soil, carefully spacing them where you want them; press them down gently. (Stock needs light to germinate.) Keep them moist and in semishade. Cover the flats with plastic until the seeds germinate. Then take off the plastic, be careful to protect the sprouts with netting, and move the flats in stages - over a period of two or three weeks - into increasing light, eventually into full sun. Start to feed the plants lightly when each has two real leaves. (Read seed catalogues closely; some varieties have more doubles and fewer singles than others. Weaker-looking seedlings with greener foliage are usually singles; healthier-looking, more grayish ones are doubles.) The sooner you get stock in the ground the better, because early planting enables the plants to build big, strong root systems and hefty stalks. You'll have a long-lasting and dramatic display.
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