Spring
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Ashitaba Superfood Seeds - Vegetable Plant
Regular price $17.73Regular priceSale price $17.73 -
Creeping Phlox seeds - Flower Plant
Regular price $17.47Regular priceSale price $17.47 -
Japanese Longevity Seeds - Vegetable Plant
Regular price $17.37Regular priceSale price $17.37 -
Carnation Seeds – Dianthus caryophyllus Flower Plant
Regular price $17.55Regular priceSale price $17.55 -
Conophytum Plant Seeds - Flower Plant
Regular price $17.65Regular priceSale price $17.65 -
Japanese Ashitaba Seeds - Vegetable Plant
Regular price $17.38Regular priceSale price $17.38 -
Fat Hen Seeds - Vegetable Plant
Regular price $17.38Regular priceSale price $17.38 -
Ivy Geranium seeds - All in one for home gardens
Regular price $17.98Regular priceSale price $17.98 -
Cleome Seeds – Cleome hassleriana Flower Plant
Regular price $17.99Regular priceSale price $17.99 -
Moss Rose Seeds – Portulaca grandiflora Flower Plant
Regular price $17.55Regular priceSale price $17.55 -
Mandevilla Sanderi seeds - All in one for home gardens
Regular price $17.59Regular priceSale price $17.59 -
Common Orache Seeds - Vegetable Plant
Regular price $17.68Regular priceSale price $17.68 -
Red Goosefoot Seeds - Vegetable Plant
Regular price $17.39Regular priceSale price $17.39 -
Geraldton Wax seeds - All in for home gardens
Regular price $17.34Regular priceSale price $17.34 -
Ranunculus Seeds – Ranunculus asiaticus Flower Plant
Regular price $17.99Regular priceSale price $17.99 -
Oak-Leaved Goosefoot Seeds - Vegetable Plant
Regular price $17.76Regular priceSale price $17.76
Welcome The Growing Season With Spring Seeds
Spring Seeds are perfect for starting vibrant gardens filled with colorful flowers, fresh herbs, leafy greens, and ornamental plants. As temperatures begin to rise and daylight hours increase, spring provides excellent conditions for seed germination and healthy plant growth. Browse spring seed choices online, each one picked for pots, plots, stacked boxes, or backyard corners.
Spring Plants That Grow Well
Spring marks the beginning of active growth for many annuals, perennials, herbs, vegetables, and flowering plants. As light stretches longer and chill lingers just enough, roots take hold while leaves grow thick, prepping for summer's heat. Tucked inside the Spring Seeds mix? Think bright wildflowers buzzing with bees, tasty basil and dill, lettuce that crunches crisp, showy borders, plus old-time garden standouts making their yearly return.
After winter rests, some plants wake with bright blooms and lively leaves. These types pop up in backyard corners, city balconies, even tucked along walkways. Not just pretty, they feed bees and butterflies needing food early on. From old-style yards to modern planters, these growers add warmth where cold once sat still.
Frequently Asked Questions
What types of plants are included in a Spring Seeds collection?
Spring Seeds packs hold flower varieties that sprout when days get warmer. Some include herbs you can later clip for cooking. Others carry tiny vegetable shoots meant for garden beds. Each box mixes kinds suited to early planting seasons. Contents shift slightly depending on region and weather patterns.
Spring planting kits usually hold a mix of veggies, herbs, colorful flowers, decorative greenery, yet also species that support bees and butterflies thriving in chilly early-season weather. Favorites tend to be short-lived blossoms, long-lasting garden flowers, salad greens, along with kitchen-used herb types.
Spring crops often grow better when temperatures stay gentle through the first weeks. Some seed sets work well in ground plots, others fit neatly into pots, elevated boxes, edges of paths, or spots meant for food plants.
From spring blooms to fall harvests, this lineup gives growers plenty of options. Colorful plantings mix with edible picks through the seasons. Choices shift with weather changes outside. Some bring bright petals. Others deliver fresh crops. Each selection fits a different moment outdoors.
Why is spring considered an ideal planting season?
When days grow longer and the ground begins to warm, that is when seeds tend to wake up. Growth kicks off fast now, helped by sunlight stretching further each morning instead of harsh midyear highs. Roots take hold easier at this time compared to later months. Before summer presses down hard, most green things find their footing well.
Spring brings mild weather, which suits young plants like veggies, blooms, and leafy greens just fine. When rain shows up on time in various places, seedlings take root more easily.
Spring pulls gardeners outside, drawn by milder days that invite fresh seeds into soil. A steady rhythm of rain plus longer sunlight sets roots moving early. Cool air slows weeds, giving starters room to breathe before summer crowds in. Many see these weeks as a quiet chance to shape what will rise later. With ground thawed and tools ready, hands dig in - building beds where growth can unfold.
How do you care for plants grown from spring seeds?
Most plants starting from spring seeds do better when they get steady water, good light, some space between drops of rain. While sprouting happens, keeping the ground damp but not soaked helps tiny shoots grow strong, their roots pushing down without struggle. Soil that lets extra water escape prevents rot, keeps young lives moving forward.
When plants grow older, they often do better with steady water, a layer of mulch, then some feeding now and again. Because space matters, keeping distance between them lets air move through while lowering the fight for sun and food.
Some types need different care, yet many thrive if they get the right environment after planting in spring. Though each has its own needs, steady warmth and light help them grow well through months of growth.
What are the benefits of planting seeds in spring?
Springtime sowing gives roots a chance to grow deep before summer heat arrives. When the weather turns warm but not hot, flowers begin to sprout more easily. Herbs often emerge stronger if they start their life cycle as days get longer. Cooler soil keeps young plants from drying out too fast. Vegetables like carrots and lettuce respond well to early planting. As sunlight increases gradually, growth tends to stay steady rather than rushed.
Later blooms might show up when seeds go into the ground in spring, simply because roots get more time to settle. Some vegetables take their sweet time ripening, yet still manage to deliver crisp picks by late summer. A burst of petals could follow weeks of slow growth, just as daylight stretches longer.
Starting fresh each year brings color, life, more than just looks. Some plants feed bees before summer even arrives. Beauty grows beside usefulness when choices favor both eyes and insects. A garden can give back much rather than take. Success comes easier once the right kinds settle into soil.