French Marigold COURT JESTER Tall Rare Beneficial Plant 100 Seeds
Pure Seed ? Non-GMO ? Fresh ? No Filler -
PRODUCT INFORMATION
French Marigold Seeds - Court Jester
Tagetes patula
It's easy to see where this fun little bloom gets its name! Reminiscent of the striped costumes of the sprightliest member of the court, our Court Jester French Marigolds feature a bold red/brown and yellow pattern.
If you need a pop of colour in the garden that endures Spring, Summer and Autumn, then you really can?t go past a French Marigold. With a long list of benefits for the garden and in the home, as well as being a gorgeous cut flower, you won?t mind that these scented beauties will re-seed every year.
Bees and Butterflies love them!
The French Marigold is certainly one of the most planted annual flowers in the whole wide world. They have a fabulous reputation as a stand out companion plant for vegetables, such as tomatoes, and are used by cottage gardeners to attract important and much loved pollinators like bees and butterflies.
They propagate ever so quickly.
It?s best to plant them in early-late Spring, about 1cm deep with a quarter of a teaspoon of fertiliser sprinkled around the top. It?s important to keep the soil moist for the first 10-20 days. The seeds will take 1-2 weeks to germinate. Best of all, they are very simple and easy for gardening beginners, who will be growing their first flowers seeds in no time at all
Saving seeds...sprinkles...
As you can see below, you must deadhead your French Marigolds regularly for a number of reasons, which include:
encouraging regular blooming
avoiding the plant wilting and going to seed
keeping flower heads for seed -saving.
It?s really easy to snap off the flower heads and drop them all over the ground so they will self-seed later. I usually do this during the balmy summer nights on my nightly evening garden walk (best done with a glass of local wine in one hand, leaving the other free to sprinkle seeds). You can also pop the flower heads straight into a brown paper bag to dry inside and then you can satisfyingly crack open the dry seed heads in early spring to sprinkle into seed trays. Keep them moist and warm and they will surely spring to life in no time at all.
Ensure that you prick our their first three flowers, so that the plant bushes out to each side, then there will be more blooms for the life of it?s growing season if you do this at the beginning.
It?s also a green manure.
All types of Marigolds are extremely popular with Permaculture and market gardeners, many gardeners plant them to stop nematodes, cabbage worms, whitefly, aphids and many other vegetable and foliage damaging insects.
These darling plants also lure and woo useful insects like praying mantis, lacewings and ladybirds with their beautiful scent.
I know a couple of adventurous experimental gardeners who have used the spent foliage at the end of the season to chop up and turn it into the soil, as a green manure, with the aim of keeping soil-borne nematodes at bay. They believe that it has been successful and now I must give this a try. It would also be a great addition to the compost heap.
Who can go past bright colours and scent?
It?s hard to pass by this striped beauty, with all its benefits. I adore plants that have a retro look and feel to them and the ?Court Jester? certainly sparked my interest as an attractive plant when first I laid eyes on it.
Because of the exquisite harlequin-reminiscent striped colours, combined with the variation of block burgundy petals featuring a perfectly round yellow bauble of pollen in the centre, I find they make an interesting cut flower arrangement for inside the home also.
If you do plant them in a mostly sunny spot, the flowers will grow long stems that erect towards the sunshine, its possible to get a stem 20-30 cm long, which is quite a tall marigold in comparison to some of the hybrid store-bought varieties that we have taken home and planted previously.
This heirloom variety has a wonderfully refreshing and strong, clean, almost soap-like yet floral smell. I think their petals would make a great addition to dried potpourri or to homemade soaps due to this incredibly pleasing scent and in a vase they are sure to make any room of the house smell just beautiful. HAPPY GARDENING!
FAST FACTS
- Name: French Marigold Seeds - Court Jester
- Botanical Name: Tagetes patula
- Life Cycle: Annual
- Light Requirement: Full Sun
- Planting Season: Spring
- Plant Type: Fern-like stems with large, bright yellow and red striped petals
- Features: Heirloom, Attracts Pollinators, Attracts Hummingbirds, Fragrant, Deer Resistant, Drought Tolerant, Cut Flower Garden, Easy to Grow & Maintain, Container Garden
- Color: Yellow, Red
- Blooms: Summer
- Plant Height: Up to 20 inches
- Plant Spacing: 12 inches
- Planting Depth: 1/16 inch
- Sowing Method: Start Indoors, Direct Sow
- Cold Stratification: No
- Hardiness Zones: 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10
- Ships: Year Round.
- benefits of Growing Marigolds: Marigolds actually attract beneficial insects such as ladybugs, parasitic wasps and lacewings which all prey on harmful garden insects reducing the amount of damaging insects found around your garden. Marigolds also help eliminate nematodes, with toxins found within the plant.
PLANTING INSTRUCTIONS: MARIGOLDS
WHEN TO PLANT MARIGOLD SEEDS: Direct sow Marigold seeds after all threat of frost has passed - it's recommended that you wait approximately 1-2 weeks after the final frost date. Marigolds can also be sown indoors approximately 50-60 days before your final frost.
WHERE TO PLANT MARIGOLD SEEDS: Marigolds are tolerant of most types of soil, and enjoy warm, Full Sun conditions. Marigolds do best in rich, well draining soil that remains moist, though once established can be somewhat drought tolerant as well. If planted in cool, or moist locations, Marigolds are susceptible to powdery mildew.
HOW TO PLANT MARIGOLD SEEDS: Sow Marigold seeds directly onto the surface of the soil and firmly compress. Don't cover your seeds, as Marigolds require sunlight in order to germinate.
HOW TO CARE FOR MARIGOLDS: Once planted, Marigolds require very little by way of care. Typically, you only need to water manually if the soil has gotten dry or dusty to the touch, or if it's been more than 2 weeks since any sort of natural rainfall. You can increase your blooms significantly by deadheading your spent blooms. Dried, spent blooms can be stored in a dry, cool location that gets minimal exposure to sunlight, and if planted, the seeds in the seed heads can produce additional marigolds the following year.
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