Daisy White Flower Seeds Packet

Shipping approximately Winter 2025

$2.35

SKU: SEDAIS
Barcode: 843458152767


  • Plant Type: Perennial
  • Genus: Bellis
  • Species: Perennis
  • Plant Height/Width: 4-6"
  • Season: Midsummer to fall
  • Exposure: Full sun to partial shade
  • Difficulty: Easy

Step One: Timing

When to start?

  • plant in spring after danger of frost

Step Two: Starting

Where to start and how to sow?

  • Direct sow: After all danger of frost, sow seeds and cover with 0.25" of soil.
  • Start indoors: for earlier bloom, about 6 to 8 weeks before the last frost. When plants are a few inches high, thin or transplant before they become crowded.

Step Three: Growing

How to keep happy?

  • Bellis Perennis seeds have to be just lightly pressed into the soil for the best germination. English Daisy grows very low to the ground and spreads quickly preferring to grow in fertile, moist, well-drained soil and full sun or partial shade.

Daisy

These daisies create a lovely blooming mat, suitable for meadows or flower beds. With small flowers standing 6 to 12 inches tall, adorned with white petals and yellow centers, they thrive in full sunlight, gracing gardens from mid-summer to fall. Attracting bees, butterflies, and other pollinators, they're easy to grow and maintain, boast an extended bloom time, and grow rapidly. Perfect for container gardens, cut flower gardens, and ground cover, they also deter deer and rabbits.

Plant Care
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Rating of 4 means .
The rating of this product for "" is 4.

Keep the Blooms Coming

Deadhead often for a pristine garden and a continual burst of blossoms. No need for complicated pruning – just pinch those faded blooms away!

Plant Care
Rating of 1 means .
Rating of 4 means .
The rating of this product for "" is 4.

Keep the Blooms Coming

Deadhead often for a pristine garden and a continual burst of blossoms. No need for complicated pruning – just pinch those faded blooms away!

The Brief and Glorious History of the Daisy White

Bellis might be linked to "bellus," Latin for "pretty," and perennis meaning "everlasting" in Latin. Curiously, the term "daisy" could have arisen from this flower's nocturnal closing and daytime opening, akin to a "day's eye.