Poppies are among the prettiest of garden flowers, and we all want them in our gardens. But there are so many varieties, all flowering at different times of the year, that knowing when to sow and grow them can be confusing to the point we miss out on them altogether! To make things easy, and ensure you get these colourful ‘wind-flowers’ in your garden, follow our simple, season by season ‘pop-in-a-poppy’ guide.
Winter wonders
Those who live in warmer and northern parts of the country get their first taste of poppy colour from the Iceland poppy. It begins showing off its crinkly yellow, orange and salmon-coloured flowers in late winter and continues to bloom right through spring. These poppies take 24 weeks to flower from seed so sow them in mid to late summer.
Spring surprises
Shirley and Flanders poppies take around 20 weeks to flower from seed. The seed is not difficult to germinate and we get a very obvious reminder about when to sow them. When ANZAC Day comes around, that’s when you reach for the seed packet!
Summer sizzlers
Opium poppies are frost hardy, and like to germinate in cool conditions. The flowers don’t last long so sow seed directly into the garden (not a seed tray) every 2-4 weeks throughout spring. And here’s a tip: if you can’t locate the seed in a garden centre, look on Trade Me.
The biggest beauty in the poppy world is the Oriental poppy which produces flowers up to 8cm in diameter. It flowers in summer and is a perennial, but you will have to be patient for this one. Seed needs to be sown in February and the plant blooms the following summer. This poppy is quite happy to spend its early days in a pot so don’t be afraid to sow it into a seed tray and then pot it up, ready to plant out 8 months later in spring.
Although there are many more varieties of poppy you can try, these beautiful basics will get you started, and turn your garden into a riot of colour!