-40%

200+ FIDDLENECK, LACY PHACELIA, BLUE TANSY, BEE ATTRACTOR, WILD FLOWER SEEDS

$ 2.11

  • Brand: Unbranded
  • Color: Blue
  • Common Name: FIDDLENECK or Lacy Phacelia
  • Country/Region of Manufacture: United States
  • Features: Flowering
  • Genus: LACY PHACELIA
  • Plant Format: SEEDS
  • Plant Life Cycle: PERENNIAL
  • Plant Type: Decorative Plant
  • Sunlight: Full Sun
  • Type: Flower Seeds
  • USDA Hardiness Zone (°F): ZONES 1-10

Description

200+ SEEDS PHACELIA TANACETIFOLIA, LACY PHACELIA aka FIDDLENECK, BLUE TANSY, PURPLE TANSY 2 - 4 FT TALL, BLUE LAVENDER SPLIT CURLING TENDRILS LOADED WITH BLOOMS .... FAST GROWTH HARDY WILD FLOWER / ATTRACTS BEES AND ALL BENEFICIAL INSECTS TO COMBAT PROBLEM INSECTS / SPRING & SUMMER BLOOMS / FAST GROWTH ANNUAL / SELF SOWS TO REPRODUCE LIKE A PERENNIAL / ZONES 1 - 10 / CAN HANDLE HIGH HEAT / PREFERS SUN / BEST FOR BEE CONSERVATION / WELL DRAINING SOIL / ADAPTS TO MOST CONDITIONS / GROWING INSTRUCTIONS INCLUDED / EASY TO GROW FOR ANYONE / SOW EARLY SPRING "One of the TOP 10 wild flowers to help the bees survive." Grows will in hot, harsh desert conditions, but it adapts well to other environments. Commonly planted in vineyards with crops as an attractor. Highly regarded as an ornamental plant. We all need to start planting more of the beneficial flowers! The Phacelia will attract insects for miles. I INCLUDED CALIFORNIA STATE INFORMATION, FOR THOSE WHO WOULD LIKE TO READ: Phacelia tanacetifolia is a species in the Boraginaceae (Borage) family known by the common name Lacy Phacelia. It is native to the southwestern United States and northern Mexico, but it is now used in many places in agriculture as a cover crop, a bee plant, an attractant for other beneficial insects, and an ornamental plant. It is planted in vineyards and alongside crop fields, where it is valued for its long, coiling flower clusters of nectar-rich flowers which open in sequence, giving a long flowering period. It is a good insectary plant, attracting pollinators such as honey bees. It is also attractive to hoverflies (family Syrphidae), which are useful as biological pest control agents because they eat aphids and other pests. This is an annual herb which grows erect to a maximum height near 100 centimeters. The wild form is hairy and coated in stiff hairs. The leaves are mostly divided into smaller leaflets deeply and intricately cut into toothed lobes, giving them a lacy appearance. The very hairy flower cluster is a one-sided curving or coiling cyme of bell-shaped flowers in shades of blue and lavender. Each flower is just under a centimeter long and has protruding whiskery stamens. The seeds are "negatively photoblastic" or photodormant, and will only germinate in darkness.