So many of you are chomping at the bit to get going so here we go.....everything you need to know about sowing, growing and giving Cosmos.
First of all - why wouldn't you? It is the floweriest flower you could have in your garden - the more you cut it, the more it flowers, it will fill your posies all summer long until the first frosts and it's one of the simplest ways to achieve flowery success.
If you're a fan of pink - you can't not. (Other colours can be grown).
Here are my 2 little beds of Cosmos last year to inspire you as to what's coming.
And I'll be doing a whole load of new videos this year as we sow our Cosmos-filled Flower Kits together in The Flower Club so check back here for updates.
Sowing
Pricking Out
Pinching
Once they are around 20cm high, you'll need to pinch their main tip out.
This simply means taking the main stem between your two fingers (or using a sharp, clean pair of secateurs or scissors) and removing the stem, leaving the first couple of sets of leaves.
If feels so cruel, but if you don't you'll have one spindly tall plant - we want bushy, stocky fellows.
Before:
After
Keep potting them on if their root balls fill their current pot.
Hardening Off
About 7-10 days before your last frost date is predicted to be, start moving your Cosmos plants out of the greenhouse during the day and back in again at night, gradually building up the time they are exposed to the elements.
This will toughen them up so that when they do go out, their stems will be stronger and tougher meaning they are more likely to win in the inevitable battles against slugs and heavy rain.
Planting Out
After your last frost date has passed, and not a moment before, you can plant them out into the garden. I
In my 1m wide beds, I planted 2 rows with plants spaced 30cm apart and they flourished last year. See video above.
Staking
These plants can grow up to a metre tall and if you don't stake them, they will simply snap in the first strong winds.
Here's how I support mine - I place a layer of netting about 30cm up across the beds and then use twine to zig zag around the stakes at a height of about 60cm as they grow. You can see this in the video above.
Picking
As with all cut flowers, cut your flowers before the sun reaches them in the morning or after it has left them in the evening to get the longest vase life.
I am lazy so I have never done the former - but if you do, full kudos to you, you can call yourself a proper flower farmer :)
For the best vase life, you'll want to cut them, just as the buds are starting to crack open. Because these things have so many flowers, I pick some at this stage, and then some that are fully open so my posies have instant wow appeal for the people to whom they are given, but also the buds slowly open over time - for me, I love seeing this happen with my flowers at the kitchen table over the course of a week or two.
Once picked, you'll want to condition them, which simply means to strip all the lower foliage off and place them up to their necks in cool water in a cool place for a few hours - I use my stone shed for this and because I cut in the evening, I just leave them there overnight so they are ready for wrapping and giving the next morning.
Presenting
You can cut them short and create jam jar posies.
You can keep them long and wrap in simple brown paper.
You can mix them with just about any other flower in the garden, or give them all by themselves.
You definitely want to take some 'armfuls of flowers' pictures with these and share them in our Facebook group :)
Then give.
That's it.
If there was one flower you could grow in your garden this summer (and Sweet Peas had been removed from the planet) - these would be the ones.
I hope you decide to join us as we sow, grow and give Cosmos this summer - honestly, you'd be hard-pressed to find anything that will give you as much joy.