For foxgloves I just let them get very very dry on the flowe...

Henry

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nevent

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Kind-1 (TextNote)

2026-05-30T06:35:04Z

↳ Reply to SimOne (npub1gh85ku2etgwedvhakxpkh073tk3cz5wqldffcd7wqw58ky65874sdcnqad)

Any tips? I’ve been collecting heads and then putting them on a tray in the sun to dry and separating the seeds into old envelopes. Need to build a co...

For foxgloves I just let them get very very dry on the flower stalk naturally shake the flower stalk and they all fallout. You can transplant them but I just gather that seed by cutting the dry seeding flower stem and shaking it where I want them, if you want you can bag it and upturn it and collect the seed that way. Usually there is so much seed they appear there regardless of any slug pressure also I think the transplant shock also can leave them vulnerable to attack.

I do the same thing for hollyhocks, poppies etc anything I have seen that seems to better at seeding than transplanting.

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  "content": "For foxgloves I just let them get very very dry on the flower stalk naturally shake the flower stalk and they all fallout. You can transplant them but I just gather that seed by cutting the dry seeding  flower stem and shaking it where I want them, if you want you can bag it and upturn it and collect the seed that way. Usually there is so much seed they appear there regardless of any slug pressure also I think the transplant shock also can leave them vulnerable to attack. \n\nI do the same thing for hollyhocks, poppies etc anything I have seen that seems to better at seeding than transplanting.  \n\n",
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