Ten ‘must grow’ cut flowers

A mixed bouquet of cut flowers

There’s a lot of advice that says, when you start a flower farm, don’t try to grow everything. Keep to a few varieties and learn how to grow them well. It’s good advice, but very hard to follow when you see all the possibilities out there. I still buy too many seeds and I’m still experimenting, but I also now have a number of ‘must grow’ flowers.

Snapdragons or antirrhinums

Antirrhinum / Snapdragon

  • Great value – you’ll get several hundred seeds in every packet.

  • Once pinched, plants will give you five to eight stems and, with time, a second flush.

  • If I sow them indoors under lights in January, and plant them in the polytunnel a few weeks later, I can get blooms mid-May.

  • Equally beautiful as a bouquet filler or alone in a bunch. This is just as well, because I always grow too many.

    But

  • Look beyond the plain ones – there are a loads of stunning varieties in a range of colours.

  • Don’t forget to stake or support them, or they’ll bend and curl like in the photo.

Cosmos

Cosmos

  • Really easy to grow.

  • Good value - normally 100 or so seeds to a packet.

  • Give a lovely, airy feel to bouquets.

  • Wide range of varieties from dark red and pink to white and pale yellow, with single or frilly double petals.

But

  • You have to pick the stems when the buds are about to open, and it’s hard work to stay on top of dead heading.

  • Varieties like ‘Purity’ with the larger petals can be a bit delicate and get crushed in bouquets.

Dahlia

  • Just a truly magnificent flower.

  • Looks lovely with other flowers, but almost better alone.

  • While the initial tubers can feel expensive, they’ll multiply, and you can split or propogate from them to get more and more plants each year.

But

  • A short vase life of 3-5 days. Many people – including bouquet florists - expect their flowers to last longer. This is less of an issue if your focus is events.

  • Dinner plate varieties, while beautiful, are hard to arrange and have the shortest vase life – I’ve found pom pom, ball, decorative and waterlily are better varieties for bouquets.

  • You’ll need to dig them up or mulch heavily to see then through a harsh, wet winter.

  • Totally addictive - once you start growing them, you can ‘t help ordering more each year.

Helianthus or sunflower

Helianthus / Sunflower

  • Easy to grow.

  • As well as traditional yellow, you can get more sophisticated varieties in white and pale yellow, to purple-tinged and deep red.

  • They can help fill the focal flower gap between when ranunculus finish and dahlias start.

  • They’re fast growers and, for some varieties, you’ll get flowers in 8-10 weeks.

  • The time to flowering is pretty consistent so you can plan when to sow based on when you need flowers.

But

  • Opt for the pollenless varieties.

  • Plant them 15cm apart so they stay small enough to use in bouquets.

  • You have to harvest them when they’re just opening.

Ranunculus

  • A really pretty flower.

  • Easier to grow than you think.

  • Early bloomers. If you grow under cover, you can get blooms from mid-April.

  • They bloom for a few weeks, and you’ll get at least five stems per plant.

  • They last 10 to 12 days in the vase.

But

  • Corms are expensive and you can only use them once, as the flowers are never as good the following year.

  • You’ll need to cover plants with frost cloth if it freezes, even in a polytunnel.

Nigella / Love in a Mist

  • Easy to grow.

  • Unusual and interesting flowers.

  • If you leave the flowers, the seed pods are equally lovely and can be used fresh or dried.

  • You can autumn sow these and get flowers in May and June the next year.

But

  • I have nothing bad to say about Nigella.

Phlox drummondii

  • These make a very pretty filler flower and smell lovely.

  • Available in a range of beautiful pastel colours.

But

  • You need to pinch out the early buds and flowers, to get a bushier, taller plant, or they can be a bit short and straggly.

  • Vase life is only 5-7 days.

Scabiosa

Scabiosa

  • A charming flower with an unusual shape.

  • Regular cutting encourages more flowers.

  • Keeps blooming right through the last frost.

  • A perennial variety that comes back each year.

But

  • Vase life of 5-7 days is a bit shorter than some of my other favourites.

  • They need to be supported or they’ll fall over, and they can be difficult to harvest.

Stocks

  • The Aida variety can be grown over winter to flower in late spring.

  • Great on their own in bunches.

But

  • They’re single stem flowers. At least, pinching has never worked well for me, even on the branching variety.

  • Their smell isn’t for everyone.

Zinnias

Zinnias

  • The Aida variety can be grown over winter to flower in late spring.

  • Great on their own in bunches.

But

  • Slugs love and, if you’re not careful, completely devour them.

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How to grow ranunculus

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Planning the beds on our flower farm plot