Gardening Supplies

How to Grow Canterbury Bells from Seed – Cut Flower Gardening for Beginners Series



#Gardening #GrowingFlowers #CutFlowerGarden

Growing canterbury bells from seed is a long process. Like most biennials, it will take at least two seasons. Learning how to grow canterbury bells is helpful in creating a cut flower garden on a small budget. Good luck!

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I’m not an expert, I’m just some person with a garden. Thanks for visiting the Freshcutky organic gardening channel. This channel focuses on my journey, as I work to build my own cut flower farm. In the garden, I will answer some of the most common “gardening for beginners” type questions I get, including growing flowers from seed. Growing greens and planting beautiful organic food is something I’m really passionate about. Thank you for joining me as I learn to grow flowers, vegetables, and more.

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Many ornamental flowers and cut flowers are TOXIC. ALWAYS do your own research and take responsibility for the plants that you introduce around your kids, pets, and everyone else. Use common sense when handling plant materials: wear gloves, always wash hands, avoid contact with face, etc. NEVER consume any plant which has not been positively identified with complete certainty to be safe and edible. Before planting anything, research to determine whether specific flowers are considered invasive where you live or if there are laws that apply to their planting in your area.

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@freshcutky documents the pursuit of my goal of one day owning my own cut flower farm. Along the way, you’ll see random projects, cooking, and of course – growing stuff. I’m not an expert, and would never claim to be. There’s always more to learn – this is my journey. The purpose of my blog, and other social media accounts (including YouTube) is to share ideas. I do my best to offer information that is useful, but reliance on that information is strictly at your own risk and NOT a substitute for professional advice of any kind. I do not create sponsored content or use affiliate links unless they have been explicitly stated above.

23 Comments

  1. Really want to try growing these! They're beautiful!

    You mentioned chilling snapdragon seeds, too – is this something you can do for all seeds, or should you only do it for flowers that need certain chill hours?

  2. My sister gave me some of these for my birthday for my garden. The colors I got are purple, pink and white

  3. Can I cut them after the blooms pass to make room for other flowers that bloom later in the summer, or will cutting kill them?

  4. Thanks for showing the seedlings! I like to see the plant without blooms to see what they will look like! And because I forgot to label the seeds and planted them next to delphiniums and did not which emerged and which didn’t!

  5. i've tried to grow these so many times, i love the bell shaped and cup shaped flowers, i am going to give them a shot again this year and PRAY they show up this time! 😩

  6. Every day I think that I’m done ordering seeds and researching on how to grow new plant…………until I watch your video. There is no end in flower growing! Ohh 🙂

  7. Those are soooo elegant. I had ordered these seeds and some foxglove seeds so was watching videos on how to care for them. When I discovered foxglove are highly toxic, I swapped them for something else. Thanks for your videos!

  8. Thank you for this wonderful video on Canterbury bells! I planted these in my flower garden this year! Wish me luck! Ty

  9. I grew these from seed last year, took over a year for them to bloom, but they are looking beautiful at the moment well worth the wait, I was trying to find a video on winter care after they have bloomed could you give me some advice? I'm from Ireland so we have temperate climate here.

  10. Is it crazy to think “Hey, maybe I won’t be here next year to see biennials bloom” then I think, well, somebody else will appreciate them. 🥺🤷🏻‍♀️

  11. I have 7 inch plants ready to be planted. I’m in zone 6. When do I plant them outside? Can I do that right now? I live in Ohio and don’t have a hoop house. So if they’re biannual do they self seed?

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