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Carnation Giant Chabaud

The traditional wedding flower for button holes, Carnation Giant Chabaud produces large fragrant double flowers with the traditional frilled petal edge. The flowers bloom in a wide range of colours produced on long straight stems making them the ideal choice for cutting, and they grow to an approximate height of 45cm.
Half Hardy Annual

Product Part No: 55901

Pack size: 120 Seeds

In Stock
Price: £2.00

When to Sow

  • Jan
  • Feb
  • Mar
  • Apr
  • May
  • Jun
  • Jul
  • Aug
  • Sep
  • Oct
  • Nov
  • Dec

Additional Details

When to Sow Giant Chabaud Carnation Seeds

January to May

Where to Sow

Early sowings in pots or trays under glass at 18°C, under a light covering of vermiculite or compost. Later sowings can be made in trays and kept in a cold frame.

What to do Next

Seedlings under glass should be pricked off into trays at 10cm (4") apart. When seedlings are about 8cm (3") tall, transplant to the flowering site at 25cm (10") apart.

Flowers

July onward. Early sowing flower the same year, outdoor sowing flower the following year

Handy Tip

As well as bedding displays, Carnations are beautiful cut flowers and the traditional wedding buttonhole.

FLOWER SEED SOWING TECHNIQUE

Use seed trays or plastic modules and a good seedling compost, preferably using a peat substitute. For small sowings standard pots can be used.

Firm the compost lightly and moisten before sowing. Very fine seeds, like Begonia (where there are more than 60,000 seeds to a gram) should be mixed with dry horticultural sand to avoid one big clump of seed, and to help see where the seed has been sown.

As a general rule, the depth of sowing depends on the size of the seed. Aim to cover the seed with compost or vermiculite to the same depth as the size of the seed. Very fine seed need not be covered at all.

Sow thinly and cover the tray with a sheet of glass with paper on top. Wipe the glass every day and inspect the tray for signs of germination. Sowings in pots can be enclosed in a polythene bag for the same effect.

As soon as seedlings break the surface, remove the glass and paper or polythene bag. If left under glass they will become leggy and weak. Keep moist with a fine spray.

When the first set of true leaves (not the seedling leaves) have formed they should be pricked off into trays, setting the seedlings about 4-5cm (1 1/2-2") apart. Always handle by the leaves and not the stem and use a fork or knife blade to ease them out of the compost. Keep in the shade for a couple of days after pricking off.

Gradually harden the plants by increasing ventilation and moving the trays into a cold frame and finally outside for 7 days before transplanting into the flowering site.