Item Number: SWF705
California Native Wildflower Mix (1/4 lb)
Beautiful California Native Wildflowers
California Native - Wildflower Mix
Annuals Open Pollinated. Enjoy the rich flora of California with this native mix. Contains: Arroyo Lupine, Pigmy-leaf Lupine, Yellow Lupine, California Poppy, Five Spot, Baby Blue Eyes, Sky Lupine, Chinese Houses, Tidy Tips, Godetia, Goldfields, Mountain Phlox, California Blue Bell, Showy Evening Primrose, Mountain Garland, Bird's Eyes, California Goldfields, Blue-eyed Grass, Globe Gilia.
Flowers: Colorful Mix. Blooms spring to late summer
Attracts: Attracts bees and butterflies
Soil: Prefers native soil
Native: California
USDA Zone: 3-10
Plant In: Fall or Spring
Planting Depth: 1/8"
Days to Germinate: 10-30 Days
Height At Maturity: 8"-36"
Sun/Shade Requirements: Full Sun
Water Needs: Light Water
Seeding Rate: Use 125 seeds/sq ft
Bloom Season: Spring/Summer
Seeding Rate: 1/4-1/2 Lb/1000 sq ft or 11 Lbs/acre
Quantities of Specie Type Annual: 17 Perennial: 2 Biennial: 0 Native: 19 Imported: 0
Check Your Zone Compatibility:
Compatible with your zone.
Growing Zone for
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Shipping Information
Shipping Information
Shipping Weight: 0.3 lb
Dimensions: 5.5"L x 5.5"W x 0.25"H
Features
Features
- Attracts Bees/Butterflies
- California Native
- Native
- Open-Pollinated
- Wildflower
Characteristics
Characteristics
Planting & Care
Planting & Care
Useful Information
Useful Information
Guarantee
Guarantee

Peaceful Valley Farm & Garden Supply brand vegetable seeds are guaranteed to germinate. Once the seeds have sprouted, please understand that Peaceful Valley cannot be held responsible for the many uncontrollable growing and climatic conditions that must be met to ensure the success of your crop(s).
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Finally installed a wooden border between my neighbor's lawn and the wood chips in my front yard and wanted flowers along the edge in a mixed sun-shade location that gets blazing afternoon sun but little in the morning. Laid down these seeds in a 2 foot wide strip in November (probably too thickly, I could've spread them over more space), watered them in, and covered them with cheap tulle fabric to prevent birds eating them. And they came up...boy, did they come up! Once the plants were about 2-3" tall I removed the tulle, and the rainy winter took care of the rest of the watering. As you see from the picture taken some are now about 3 feet high and blooming began in February; in mid-March there are at least 6 different flowers blooming, with more to come as the weather warms.
I do wish the website had small pictures of each of the wildflowers so I'd know what everything was! Also, if they sold a sign with names of the flowers and small pictures that I could put in front of the area for my neighbors, I'd buy it. For now, I'm working on assembling the list and making a sign on my own.
The seeds looked nice! Ill find out if they rooted next spring lol