Planting Vinca Seeds 🌱🌺 Periwinkle Catharanthus

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  • Опубликовано: 2 авг 2024
  • This is a step-by-step tutorial on how to plant Vinca seeds indoors. Growing your own flowers from seed can save you a lot of money.
    How to Collect Vinca Seeds: • How To Collect Vinca S...
    DIY Seed Starting Mix: • How to Make A Seed Sta...
    How I Organize My Seeds: • Store & Organize Seeds...
    DIY Grow Lights: • Affordable & Easy Grow...
    How to Sterilize Pots: • Seed Starting: Clean, ...
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    #seedstarting #sowingseeds #vinca #periwinkle #flowers #garden
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Комментарии • 17

  • @408Dolly
    @408Dolly 4 месяца назад

    😻 Thanks for the heads up. Cat lady here. I don’t put toxic plants in my home or garden. I appreciate the tip. 😻

  • @lelewilliams9445
    @lelewilliams9445 5 месяцев назад +1

    I recently discover your channel and have learned so much on collecting seeds and seed growing. This my first season growing vinca and I’m really looking forward to collecting my own seed.

    • @budgetgardeningvita
      @budgetgardeningvita  5 месяцев назад

      It's such a great feeling being able to collect your own seeds and then grow plants from those seeds. Each year, I challenge myself to collect seeds from new plants that I've never collected seeds from. Spring is almost here! Happy gardening! ♥🌷

  • @michaelhornyak7506
    @michaelhornyak7506 5 месяцев назад

    You are a terrific teacher just go the perfect speed. I'm in Ohio zone 6 by lake Erie. A few of my pink snapdragons made it through the winter. I have thousands of violas growing everywhere neighbors will get gifts.

    • @budgetgardeningvita
      @budgetgardeningvita  5 месяцев назад

      Thanks so much. It's always a nice surprise when an annual plant overwinters! 😊🌷

  • @klz4377
    @klz4377 4 месяца назад

    I collected some coral Vinca seeds last fall. Vinca do well in pots and full sun. I need to get started sowing

    • @budgetgardeningvita
      @budgetgardeningvita  4 месяца назад

      I love the color of the coral Vinca. I should try to get some seeds for next year. I grew Vinca in a pot a few years back and you're right - they do very well in pots. I'll have to try that as well. Happy gardening! 🌻

  • @mortimersnead5821
    @mortimersnead5821 4 месяца назад

    I live in zone 5. I grow a perennial vinca minor. It's a great ground cover, but it only blooms for a few weeks a year. This year I'm growing Cora Red from seed as an annual.

    • @budgetgardeningvita
      @budgetgardeningvita  4 месяца назад

      I really like the perennial vinca minor. I have two different ones. One that blooms the classic blue/purple color and another more unique one that blooms a dark wine color. Your Cora Red vinca looks to be very pretty (I just looked it up). Have you started the seed for it yet?

    • @mortimersnead5821
      @mortimersnead5821 4 месяца назад

      11-21. Too early?

  • @riaganoe-vanvliet6494
    @riaganoe-vanvliet6494 5 месяцев назад

    I love vincas, and I always buy them. However, this year I've decided to grow them from seed. Other videos I've watched say the seeds must be in total darkness for at least 7 days to germinate. You, however, do not follow this rule. Can you tell me why you are still successful in growing them? I live in hot, humid Houston, Tx. I don't know if that makes a difference on how I would start the seedlings. I bought some interesting colors including Black Cherry, and would like to be as successful as you in growing them. Thank you for any advice you can give me.

    • @budgetgardeningvita
      @budgetgardeningvita  5 месяцев назад +1

      Hi there. I did cover them with a small amount of seed starting mix, but that was it. I had also read that the seeds need darkness to germinate, but I did not do anything fancy, like covering them with newspaper, putting them in a dark room, etc. What I suggest is that you experiment with it. Maybe try some with just covered seed starting or potting mix, and some covered with newspaper or put in a dark room. I don't think climate would make much of a difference. I'd love to hear how you make out with it. By the way, I love the barbecues in Texas! I've been to Plano a number of times to visit family. It's a beautiful state! 😊🌷

  • @bjbrown6488
    @bjbrown6488 5 месяцев назад

    I grew a hot pink vintage last year in my shady garden near the front door. I've never grown them from seed.

  • @timothyadams3431
    @timothyadams3431 2 месяца назад

    I planted Vinca plants I found at Home Depot and was amazed that rabbits and deer left them alone. Nothing else is safe where i live (upstate NY..a rural town at about 1500' elevation). I see Amazon has 4000 Vinca seeds for $10. Unfortunately a single small Vinca plant is $3.50 this year at Home Depot..I'm not paying that because i would need nearly 50 of them to begin to fill my flower bed. I'm tempted to buy the 4000 seeds but I can't start them indoors or in trays. I am wondering if i sowed them directly if I would have any results if i covered the seeds in a layer of pine bark nuggets for the darkness they prefer in germination. We have another few weeks before temperatures at night won't drop below 60 degrees. I think my chances for succes are slim, but $10 for 4000 seeds isn't an expensive mistake. I could cover them in a black tarp and no pine bark nuggets. I'm afraid our climate though will make it tough.

    • @budgetgardeningvita
      @budgetgardeningvita  2 месяца назад

      I say buy the seeds to start with. I just looked it up and if the seeds are from Outside Pride, it's a good deal as they are a reputable seed company. Worst case, you have seeds for next year to start earlier in the season. I've never done this, but if I were to direct sow the seeds, I would pre-soak the area, scatter the seeds, and then cover them with dark plastic (putting rocks down on the outside edges to hold down the plastic). No guarantee it would work but worth a try. Good luck, friend. I'd love to hear an update if this method works. 🤞🏼🌷