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aohara_gw

asclepias tuberosa from seed?

aohara
19 years ago

When could I direct sow butterfly weed outside? Is it too invasive in MD to put in a bed with other plants? Can it tolerate light shade?

Thanks. Amy

Comments (10)

  • cecilia_md7a
    19 years ago

    Don't know about direct sowing the seed (I started it under lights the one time I grew from seed), but it's not very invasive - it is a pretty narrow plant and doesn't spread much. Mine has reseeded itself in light shade and blooms fine.

    Keep in mind that butterfly weed is one of the latest plants to appear each season.

  • gardenpaws_VA
    19 years ago

    You can put it out any time - it's tough - but you might not get germination this year unless we have some more cold weather. When I worked at a nursery, we started it in the fall, in flats outside in the shadehouse. I think it made tuberous roots first, and only poked its head up in the spring, because when we went to pot them up, there was a nice little tuber for each sprout.
    Having said that, how long did it take for germination under lights, Cecilia? And did you have to give the seeds any kind of cold or warm stratification first? I'm hoping to start A. tuberosa and two colors of A. incarnatus, but am obviously a bit late by my own standards.

  • juliat
    19 years ago

    Last year I tried cold-stratifying asclepias tuberosa seeds in the fridge, without luck.

    This year, I've got asclepias incarnata seeds from a trade. Simply forgetting that they supposedly need cold stratification, I planted some in potting soil under lights when I was doing the rest of my indoor sowing. And I've got a nicely flourishing sprout. Just one. I think they need to be covered with earth - no light - to germinate; I'd surface-sowed the others.

    I think it germinated after about two weeks. I had a heating pad between towels under the potting tray for the first few days, but then the impatiens and larkspur germinated, so I turned off the heat. The asclepias and other seeds took a few weeks to get going. In fact, agastache just poked up a tiny feeler yesterday. I hope it decides to stick around.

    Julia

  • cecilia_md7a
    19 years ago

    Oh gosh, I don't remember what I did to start those seeds - I'll check my notes (if I still have them). I probably followed whatever directions were on the packet and/or in Eileen Powell's "From Seed to Bloom" book.

    I've noticed that most of the perennials I start take longer to germinate than the annuals. Sometimes a LOT longer.

  • Laurel7286
    19 years ago

    I have a mixed report on these. Last year I winter sowed them with very little success, because they supposedly needed cold treatment.
    This year I started some in warm conditions, on 72 deg heat mat, almost every single seed germinated (yes, I counted, she says compulsively). However, the source of the seed was different, so I cannot claim without question that the advice for cold treatment is wrong.
    Laurel

  • Dundalk_Gardener
    19 years ago

    I started ascelpias 2 years ago by putting in potting soil in fridge for awhile (weeks) and then putting on a window sill. We had leaves - all I really cared about - for the caterpillars.

  • laine713
    19 years ago

    I wintersowed mine this year, starting in December, and I see a couple of sprouts now.

  • annebert
    19 years ago

    I did A. incarnata from seed - used a heat mat, and I have a lot of seedlings.

  • alfie_md6
    19 years ago

    This spring I did A. tuberosa from seed, no stratification or anything, four seeds in a pot, surface-sowed, either on heat or at room temperature (depending on what else was growing), and 3/4 germinated in maybe 3 weeks, of which two made it to real live seedling stage.

    (Of course some people do say that "room temperature" at our house in the winter is cold enough to stratify seeds :-).)