Hollyhock Chater's Yellow

As low as €3,90 per package

  • A classic cottage Hollyhock
  • Blooms from mid-summer through to autumn
  • Wide golden yellow double flowers
  • 50 seeds per pack
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Hollyhock Chater's Yellow
1 pack
€3,90

Top Quality Seeds!

Free Gift on orders over €100

PRODUCT DESCRIPTION

Chater's Golden Yellow hollyhock begins to bloom in early to mid summer, producing impressive 1.8 meter tall flower spikes. Cut stalks back hard after bloom and plants will flower again in late summer and fall.

Provide rich soil and water regularly for best performance. Chater's Double Yellow hollyhock is a biennial or short-lived perennial.

    Order your top quality Hollyhock Chater's Yellow Seeds with Fontana Seeds Today!

    How to grow Hollyhock Chater's Double seeds

    Sow February to March or September to October. Sow seeds onto the surface of a good, free-draining, damp, seed compost. Cover with a very fine sprinkling of compost or vermiculite. Place in a propagator or seal container inside a polythene bag at a temperature of 15-20C until after germination which usually takes 14-21 days. Do not exclude light as this helps germination. Alternatively, sow in late summer in a cool greenhouse and then overwinter plants in cool, well lit conditions. Plant out the following spring. This method produces larger plants and is recommended if the soil is heavy or badly drained.

    Transplant seedlings when large enough to handle into trays or 7.5cm pots. Gradually acclimatise plants to cooler conditions for a few weeks before planting out after all risk of frost 45cm apart.

    Rust remedies
    Hollyhocks are archetypal cottage garden plants (you often see them growing beautifully in churchyards). The cleaner, sulphur-free air that we all now enjoy, however, means that fungus on roses and hollyhocks is more common. Both plants need tinkering to be at their best.

    Rust fungus forms little pustules on the underside of hollyhock basal leaves and often spreads from there up the stem. If you want to grow your hollyhocks right by a path,  they need to look vigorous and healthy. The only way to guarantee this is to use fungicides. If bordeaux mixture, a traditional copper sulphate-derived remedy, is not enough to hold rust at bay, you may need to use stronger fungicides.

    If this all feels far too much like chemical warfare, ignore any rust problems and hide the foliage of your hollyhocks by putting them nearer the back of the border.

    Make more plants
    Hollyhocks self-sow, so once you have introduced them they should spring up of their own volition, but they will creep to the sunny, open front of the bed. Watch out for this and dig some up and put them further back out of the limelight to get a balanced sweep. Don't transfer them directly, though – they need a short spell of TLC.

    Dig up self-sown seedlings and pot them into a 7cm pot. Once the roots have filled it, move them on into a slim, deep pot to accommodate the tap root.

    Read more frequently asked questions about growing Hollyhock seeds

    Fast Facts

    Article number:
    01720-11
    Botanical Name:
    Alcea rosea
    Common Name:
    Hollyhock
    Days to germinate:
    14-21 days
    Days to maturity:
    About 18-21 months after you sewed your seeds your hollyhocks will have reached adult size and will reward you with beautiful tall spikes of hollyhock flowers.
    Flowering time:
    June - September
    Hardiness and Longevity:
    Hardy Perennial
    Height:
    Up To 180cm
    Ideal For:
    Cottage Gardens
    Spread:
    Up To 60cm
    Sunlight:
    Full sun

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