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Saving Zinnia Seeds

Saving Zinnia Seeds

This is the first in a series of seed saving posts that I am writing. I chose to write about saving zinnia seeds for two reasons. First, saving zinnia seeds is easy. Second, zinnias are one of my favorite annual flowers. In addition, zinnias are a natural for a butterfly garden. My garden was full of many different butterflies including Monarch and Swallowtail. For more information about growing zinnias, check out my post titled Growing and caring for Zinnias, the complete guide.

Before we begin, let’s discuss a few seed saving guidelines.

Saving Zinnia Seeds

Benefits of saving zinnia seeds

Why save seeds when it does require effort, knowledge, time and planning? As I think about the benefits, here is my list:

Harvesting (saving) zinnia seeds

Zinnias are members of the aster family (marigolds, cosmos, daisy) and are the largest family of flowering plants. While zinnias will produce more flowers if they are deadheaded, towards the end of the season is a good time to save seeds. Here is the process:

Storing saved zinnia seeds

I like to place my saved zinnia seeds in small brown envelopes that are easy enough to find and purchase on Amazon. Brown envelopes are relatively inexpensive, easy to write on and easy to store. Here is how you store your seeds.

Seed viability decreases over time. Saved zinnia seeds should be used within 3 years. Good luck with saving zinnia seeds.


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