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Wild flowers do not
do well in competitive situations. You need therefore
to have made every effort to kill off existing grass
and weeds before trying to establish the seed. If
sown into or with agricultural or amenity seed then
these grasses may well smother the Wild flower seed.
We supply meadow grasses that are not as competitive
as part of our mixtures.
Establishing Wild
Flowers turns conventional gardening on its head.
With most gardening you decide where you want to end
up and change everything to achieve that. With Wild
Flowers you need to judge the existing soil type and
conditions and plant a mixture best suited to that
situation.
Generally the soil
fertility should be low. The seed is best sown on
well drained, nutrient poor subsoil. If the ground is
particularly fertile you might consider one of the
cornfield annual mixtures CWF1
and CWF2.
We sell two mixtures and both will give a splash of
colour in the summer. By the nature of being annuals
they will only last one year. But with some careful
management you can create the situation where
by they may reseed each year.
If you choose to go
down the Wild flower route then you need to decide
whether to plant a grass and wild flower mixture or
wild flower only mixture. Wild flower only mixtures
can work well on smaller areas but the most popular
approach is to plant wild flowers and grass seed
based on a 20% /80% ratio.
This creates the
effect of the wild flowers flowering amongst the
grass, at different times throughout the summer. The
grass maintains an attractive backdrop throughout the
year.
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