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- 37+ inches
Surprise your dinner guests with a gorgeously decorated, flower-strewn plate! These varieties produce flowers that are safe to eat and make your plated dishes special. Some of the flavors will surprise you - for example, Nasturtium is spicy like horseradish!
Shop the best quality and a wide variety of Edible Flowers: Amaranth Love Lies Bleeding Flower, Bachelor Button Cyanus Double Mixed Colors Flower, Impatiens Dwarf Mixed Colors Flower, Johnny Jump Up Helen Mount, Nasturtium Alaska Mixed Colors, Pansy, and many more!
Seeds for Edible Flowers

Amaranth Love Lies Bleeding Flower Seed
$2.49
Love Lies Bleeding Flower is an old-fashioned garden gem. These very unusual plants have showy, drooping, fuzzy red clusters of flowers that look like chenille. These tall plants are easy to grow and will catch your eye in a garden, or can be cut for a bouquet.
Color: Fuzzy red
Plant Type: Annual
Scent: Soft sweet
Fill Weight (grams): 0.15
Grows Best In: Full Sun
Days to Germination: 8-14 Days
Days To Bloom: 90 Days
Planting Depth: .125"
Seed Spacing: 18-24"
Growing Height: 3-5'
Best Container Size: 12"+
Instructions: After the danger of frost has passed, sow in well exposed warm ground. Cover with 1/8 inch of soil. When plants are 3 inches tall, thin. Rich soil preferred, but will survive in poor soil.
Suggestions: Ideal for backgrounds and screening effect. Use to highlight island beds and mix in an annual border.

Nasturtium Tall Single Mixed Colors Seed
$1.79
An old-fashioned annual, prized for ability to climb or sprawl over rough terrain. Fragrant flowers in a range of sunny colors bloom until frost.
Color: Orange, gold, red
Plant Type: Annual
Fill Weight (grams): 3
Grows Best In: Full Sun
Days to Germination: 8 - 12 Days
Days To Bloom: 32 - 40 Days
Planting Depth: .5"
Seed Spacing: 8 - 12"
Growing Height: 5'
Best Container Size: 12"+
Instructions: Nasturtiums do best direct-seeded outdoors where plants are to grow. In mild, southern climates, may be seeded in early fall for winter bloom. Plant in a dry, well-drained location. Rich soil favors growth of leaves, not flowers. Water sparingly. Easy to grow.
Suggestions: Plant at fence posts in light, dry soil, then plant Gloriosa Daisy between the posts for striking contrast. Colorful cover for fences, trellises, stumps and rocky, hard-to-garden hillsides. Leaves, buds and pods are edible.