Viola Seeds
No garden should be without these delicate-faced, hardy garden plants. This
petite relative of the modern-day Pansy blooms all winter in the southern half
of the country. If starting indoors, do so 6�8 weeks before last spring frost,
or direct sow when soil is warm and the danger of frost is past. Violas can be
grown in full sun or partial shade in warmer areas of the country.
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Orange Duet Viola Seeds
This Viola offers a beautiful color range of any F1 violas. They are early, uniform on a 6" plant that display an abundance �" flowers.
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Frost Viola Seeds
The lower petals are yellow with frosty blue upper petals that are early, uniform on a 6" plant that display an abundance �" flowers.
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Penny White Jump Up F1 Viola Seeds
The Penny series boasts the vigor growers have now come to
expect with hybrid violas. Larger than normal viola-sized
blooms proliferate over lush green, compact foliage.
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Skippy XL Plum Gold Viola Seeds
Here is another AAS Winner, with bigger blooms, longer season and
great vigor. Base petals of bright yellow that are tinged with plum
on the edges, and smaller top petals of rich plummy purple.
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Skippy XL Red Gold Viola Seeds
The new Skippy XL Red-Gold features a truly unique combination of
colors: ruby red flowers with a violet-red shading below a
bewhiskered golden yellow face.
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Flower Garden - Tips on Growing Viola From Seed
Botanically speaking, violas, pansies, and almost all violets are perennials belonging to the genus Viola. However, violas and pansies are usually treated as annuals, invaluable for winter and spring bloom in mild winter areas or zones, and for spring through summer in colder climates.
SPECIAL GERMINATION INSTRUCTIONS:
- Viola seeds are easy to germinate, however, Violas will do better with stratification, a process of subjecting seeds to moist/cold treatment to break the seeds dormancy.
- Indoors, sow seeds into moistened soil and place in the refrigerator or freezer for about 5 days. Seeds can then be germinated. Viola seed also requires darkness to germinate.
- Make sure seeds are planted at recommended depth of 1/8". SEE EACH VARIETY FOR INSTRUCTIONS"
USDA Hardiness Zone -First Frost Date- Last Frost Date
- Zone 1 -July 15th -June 15th
- Zone 2 -August 15th- May 15th
- Zone 3 -September 15th May 15th
- Zone 4 -September 15th May 15th
- Zone 5 -October 15th April 15th
- Zone 6 -October 15th April 15th
- Zone 7 -October 15th April 15th
- Zone 8 -November 15th March 15th
- Zone 9 -December 15th February 15th
- Zone 10 -December 15th January 31st (sometimes earlier)
- Zone 11 _No frost. No frost.
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