Gardening Magazine

Winter Harvest: Seed Catalogues

By Missinghenrymitchell

It’s the most wonderful time of the year: I’m enjoying my first harvest of the 2014 plant and seed catalogues.

2014 catalogues, first harvest

The first harvest of the 2014 gardening catalogues.

Most gardeners enjoy four full seasons of gardening, whether or not they realize it. In the northern hemisphere, it is the high season for plant and seed catalogues. It is a season of fertility and richness (in the mind, if not the wallet); the season of imagining the glory of our gardens in the months to come. Everything now is promising: We haven’t suffered heartbreaking drought, no surprise springtime hailstorms, no plagues of locusts. Damping off is only a vague possibility tucked away in the corners of our minds. Turning the pages of the catalogues that arrive every other day, we are reminded of that plant we’ve been meaning to grow for years now. And look! Here it is, waiting for you, at only $2.99 per pack! It would be criminally negligent not to order the seeds and get cracking.

It is understandable that enthusiasm will inevitably overtake you, and you will order more seeds than you can possibly manage to cultivate (which is fine; seeds will keep, of course). But it is worth investigating the box of seeds tucked away in the corner of the garage, or perhaps the plastic bag’s worth tucked under the wilting lettuce in the refrigerator’s crisper drawer, prior to placing this year’s order.

You’ve craved hollyhocks for five years now, true, and the price in the catalog cannot be beaten, and what’s more if you don’t order them immediately, you’ll probably forget for a few days and when you do get back to it they’ll have sold out of the variety you want. We have all seen this movie before. The color of the flowers in the catalogue’s glossy pages is unlike anything else, it would be the perfect accent in the border, and the entry promises the mature plants will be the perfect height and spread to fill in that difficult gap between the shrubs. But it’s possible you’ll find the reason you’re facing a fifth season sans-Alceas is because you have four years’ worth of unopened seed packets squirreled away. There is always a reason why certain events in the garden don’t happen the way you intend for them to, but don’t let surrender your cash too easily just now. You’ll need it when the bulb catalogues arrive in a few months.

hollyhock seeds


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