I apologize for the click-bait title for this blog post.
What I meant the title to be was “Self-sowers!”
Self-sowers in my garden are mostly annuals—though there are plenty of self-sowing perennials—which cast seed about every year and germinate in the spring, so you never have to buy seeds for them again.
Annual flowers like nicotiana, also known as flowering tobacco, which drops seeds in my vegetable garden all through the summer so that in the spring, seedlings pop up everywhere.
They are no bother because they are easy to prick out where I don’t want them such as in the center of paths or amongst the bean plants. I mostly let the nicotiana stay on the ends of the beds where I plant snapdragons and alyssum in the spring.
(Hey, is that a lightning bug trying to pollinate my flowering tobacco? Perhaps! That means more seeds for next year!)
Another reliable self-sower in the vegetable garden is dill. Those seed heads shatter with just the slightest touch, sending seed scattering across the raised beds. Then in the spring, the dill comes up all over the area where they were last year
While it isn’t as easy to knick out as nicotiana, if you get to them when they are tiny, they aren’t too much of a bother. And when they are tiny, you can also transplant them to where you really want them to grow.
Another wonderful self-sower is borage.
It sometimes shows up a little later so I think that maybe this is the year it will disappear but by mid-June, I have a lot of borage flowering in the garden. I’d rate it as easy to pull out like nicotiana. In fact, it seems to have such a tenuous hold on its spot in the garden that I’ve pulled them out sometimes while pulling weeds around them.
A new self-sower in my garden is sunflowers!
I sowed seeds for ‘Van Gogh’s Fantasy’ from Sunflower Steve last year and didn’t plan to have them self-sow but some of those seeds must have dropped to the ground because I had many seedlings show up. I let them grow on, which means I also got sunflower blooms much earlier than usual. I think I’ll let some more seeds drop to the ground this fall.
One other annual that I would love to have self-sow all over my garden is, of course, violas.
I transplanted all the violas I had growing in containers in the spring out to the flower borders when I switched out the containers to their summer plantings. While most of the violas have shriveled up in the heat and are now just brown stems, there are a few like this one growing in the shade of a hardy begonia that are still making a go of it.
I want them to set seed so that in the spring, they’ll be everywhere, like this one that I found growing in a raised bed in the vegetable garden earlier this spring.
Now who wouldn’t want that little beauty in their garden?
Some gardeners may think that self-sowers make their gardens look messy. I bet those gardeners put plastic covers on their couches and fan magazines across their dust-free coffee tables.
I think self-sowers give gardens a lovely “lived-in” look. When you step into a garden with self-sowers, you can immediately relax and be delighted by the discovery of flowers that tucked themselves in where they decided they’d grow best.
If those flowers could talk they’d say something like, “Now here’s a garden we enjoying staying in.”
Except maybe this basil…
If it could talk, I’m sure it would say, “Oops, I made a mistake. I meant to self-sow in an actual garden bed. But here I am, so I’ll just make the best of it, try to flower, and maybe send some seeds where there is actual soil to grow in.”
Where do you stand on self-sowers? For them? Or are those magazines fanned just so on your dust free coffee table?
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Kathy from Cold Climate Gardening says
I love self-sowers. I just did an IG/FB post on rose campion, which is a biennial self-sower for me.
Betsy Williams says
I also love self-sowers. It’s fascinating to see where the self-sown plants thrive as opposed to where they were originally sited. Mother Nature’s lessons at their best!
I’ve had all sorts of plants self-sow: Primulas, shiso/perilla, violas, dill, fennel, holy basil, alliums, boxwood, astanchia, cosmos, Columbine, sweet autumn clematis and poppies, to name a few. Always fascinating!!
Betsy Williams says
I also love self-sowers. It’s fascinating to see where the self-sown plants thrive as opposed to where they were originally sited. Mother Nature’s lessons at their best!
I’ve had all sorts of plants self-sow: Primulas, shiso/perilla, violas, dill, fennel, holy basil, alliums, boxwood, astanchia, cosmos, Columbine, sweet autumn clematis, foxgloves and poppies, to name a few. Always fascinating!!
Old Lady Gardener says
Love self sowers (except the weeds)! I have a viola smack in the middle of the patio going strong, just like your basil. I just sheared it back to promote new flowers. I also have all my violas from last fall still going strong in pots after wintering over. They have been cut back several times and their resilience amazes and delights me.
Helen Malandrakis says
I love flowers that self sow. I love Verbena Bonariensis. It’s easily pulled where I don’t want it an moved to where I do
Donna G says
I have cranesbill in my lawn-too far away from the mother plant to be a runner-and also Rosa glauca in the lawn, both of which I have dug out and shared. Volunteers are fun to find!
Jennifer Vaught says
I love self-sowers, especially larkspur, my mom’s favorite flower. I scatter the seeds, along with other self sowers, all over the acre that God has blessed me with.
June L Thomas says
Well I am challenged to get seeds to self sow! How do you get it to happen? Leave flowers to dry out? No mulch so seeds get to the soil? Leave the soil alone in the spring to see what pops up? No weeding incase some of them are actually seeds I wanted to self-sow? I would love to get foxgloves to self seed. Have had a bit of luck with violas and snapdragons. Confession: I also have trouble when trying to plant from seeds. I am a lazy gardener who doesn’t start seeds indoors. I just want to be able to grow them outside.