HELP with Zinnias
16 years ago
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- 16 years ago
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Need help w/ Zinnia
Comments (3)I love zinnias and just picked numerouse dried flowers head yesterday. Check out my site and you will see a photo of the zinnia seed. Here is a link that might be useful: Country Roads Gardens & Crafts...See MoreI need some help with Zinnias
Comments (7)Hi Melody, Also, zinnias like frequent (every few days) feedings of reduced-strength (1 or 2 teaspoons per gallon) Miracle-Gro Tomato Food. That formula contains extra Magnesium, which is a vital component in chlorophyll. (Plants can't make chlorophyll without Magnesium.) Miracle-Gro also contains other vital trace elements. Drench your zinnias in the morning with a foliar feeding, allowing the excess to run off to feed the roots as well. Morning feeding is good because it gives the plants time to dry off before nightfall. Foliar feeding is handy because it doesn't require a sprayer. You can just sprinkle the plants from an ordinary watering can. If you have had cloudy weather (very probable in the Pacific NorthWest), add some sugar to the formula (a teaspoon to a tablespoon per gallon). Zinnias can absorb sugar through their leaves to make up for a deficiency caused by too little sunshine in cloudy weather. Cloudy weather can greatly reduce the amount of vital photosynthesized sugar produced by the chlorophyll in sun. ZM...See MoreNeed help with zinnia variety?
Comments (1)You might want to search for " dwarf single flower white zinnia ". Profusion White, Crystal White, Star White ... similar but probably not identical....See MoreNeed expert help harvesting Zinnia seeds ...
Comments (4)Hi Maria, Like Donna said, the bottom picture is what the seeds look like. Actually, there are two kinds of zinnia seeds, the petal seeds and the floret seeds. Some of each appear in that picture. The petal seeds have a part of the petal attached to them and the floret seeds have a kind of "notch" at that place. The top picture has a lot of chaff, which is composed primarily of a zinnia flower part aptly called "chaffy scales." You can tell if a zinnia seed contains a developed embryo or not by gently pinching it between your thumb and forefinger. That takes a little practice. You can also save zinnia seeds from live flower heads as green seeds -- that technique was discussed in the message thread Zinnia Seed Viability -- Zen_Man ? ZM...See MoreRelated Professionals
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