You two are amazing and such a great wealth of information. Always well done and presented so thanks for the hard work it takes to do these each week. I always take notes!
Oh, thank you so much for the kind words 🥰 Your positive feedback really means a lot! If you ever have any topics you would like to hear us discuss, please feel free to let me know. Thanks again for watching and for taking the time to leave this lovely comment! Have a wonderful day 💚🤗💚
Thanks so much for the kind words - we really appreciate it! 🥰 So happy to hear you enjoyed seeing all the different dried flowers included in the presentation 🙂 We love looking at them, as well 😂 Thanks again for watching and for taking the time to leave a comment! Have a fantastic day 💚🤗💚
I did dry those big dill heads & they look fantastic. Some were green & some brown. Another one if you can get hold of it is Chinese statice( limonium sinensis) if you can get hold of it. I have only 4 plants here in Australia, but it is amazing, fine & airy. Perennial gypsophila looks very cute dried too.
Fantastic tips - thanks so much for sharing! 🥰 The statice you mentioned looks beautiful - airy and graceful, just as you described 😍 Wishing you a beautiful and bountiful spring in lovely Australia! Thanks again for watching, and have a fantastic day 💚🤗💚
Thanks so much, Sally! I love experiments and was so excited to be pleasantly surprised by some of these results 👩🔬 So happy to hear you were surprised, as well! Thanks again for watching and for taking the time to leave a comment 💚 Have a lovely day! 🤗
Great video! I have just dried helebores here in New Zealand as an experiment. Very happy with the result. Pink, purple, white. All stages worked, with and without seed pods. ❤
Oh, how wonderful! Thanks so much for sharing this tip - hellebores are some of my favorite flowers ☺️ Wishing you a flower-filled spring in beautiful New Zealand! 😍 Thanks again, and have a great day 💚🤗💚
There are so many flowers you can dry. Ageratum, the blue is bedst, Amaranthus, Celosia, gomphrena, linum seed heads, lonas inodora. molucella, rhodante manglesi, delphinium annual and very dobbel dry bedst, salvia horminium, statice suworowi, xeranthemum annuum and zinnia are some of what I use to dry
Great video! When do you harvest eucalyptus and do you hang it to dry or dry it upright in a container? I am wondering that if you dry it upright, the leaves will stay more horizontal. TIA
Wonderful information! Thank you. I have a question about my statice seedlngs. I started the blue one. Some of the leaves are pure red. Also there is red along the stem down to the root. Is this normal? I heard someone say this might be aster yellows virus. If its the virus, the seeds must have been infected because, the red leaves started before I even took them outside. Thanks so much for any help you can give me. I just need to know if I should throw these out.
You two are amazing and such a great wealth of information. Always well done and presented so thanks for the hard work it takes to do these each week. I always take notes!
Oh, thank you so much for the kind words 🥰 Your positive feedback really means a lot! If you ever have any topics you would like to hear us discuss, please feel free to let me know. Thanks again for watching and for taking the time to leave this lovely comment! Have a wonderful day 💚🤗💚
I love feverfew, fresh and dried! I make dried arrangements on top of pumpkins for fall decor:)
Oh, wow - that sounds amazing! 🎃 Thanks for sharing this great idea, Madonna, and have a wonderful day! 💚🤗💚
What a wonderful selection of dried flowers, and a great production of the informative video. Thank you.
Thanks so much for the kind words - we really appreciate it! 🥰 So happy to hear you enjoyed seeing all the different dried flowers included in the presentation 🙂 We love looking at them, as well 😂 Thanks again for watching and for taking the time to leave a comment! Have a fantastic day 💚🤗💚
I did dry those big dill heads & they look fantastic. Some were green & some brown. Another one if you can get hold of it is Chinese statice( limonium sinensis) if you can get hold of it. I have only 4 plants here in Australia, but it is amazing, fine & airy. Perennial gypsophila looks very cute dried too.
Fantastic tips - thanks so much for sharing! 🥰 The statice you mentioned looks beautiful - airy and graceful, just as you described 😍 Wishing you a beautiful and bountiful spring in lovely Australia! Thanks again for watching, and have a fantastic day 💚🤗💚
Gypsophila drys bedst standing up in a bit of water. The same do hortentia flowers.@@LayneAngelo
Great episode!! So many of those flowers I never would have thought to dry!!! Thanks ladies!!
Thanks so much, Sally! I love experiments and was so excited to be pleasantly surprised by some of these results 👩🔬 So happy to hear you were surprised, as well! Thanks again for watching and for taking the time to leave a comment 💚 Have a lovely day! 🤗
You're always giving great video's, thanks!
Thanks so much for the kind words! ☺️ So happy you are enjoying “Seed Talk” 🙂 Have a fabulous day! 💚🤗💚
Great video! I have just dried helebores here in New Zealand as an experiment. Very happy with the result. Pink, purple, white. All stages worked, with and without seed pods. ❤
Oh, how wonderful! Thanks so much for sharing this tip - hellebores are some of my favorite flowers ☺️ Wishing you a flower-filled spring in beautiful New Zealand! 😍 Thanks again, and have a great day 💚🤗💚
There are so many flowers you can dry. Ageratum, the blue is bedst, Amaranthus, Celosia, gomphrena, linum seed heads, lonas inodora. molucella, rhodante manglesi, delphinium annual and very dobbel dry bedst, salvia horminium, statice suworowi, xeranthemum annuum and zinnia are some of what I use to dry
Great video! When do you harvest eucalyptus and do you hang it to dry or dry it upright in a container? I am wondering that if you dry it upright, the leaves will stay more horizontal. TIA
Wonderful information! Thank you. I have a question about my statice seedlngs. I started the blue one. Some of the leaves are pure red. Also there is red along the stem down to the root. Is this normal? I heard someone say this might be aster yellows virus. If its the virus, the seeds must have been infected because, the red leaves started before I even took them outside. Thanks so much for any help you can give me. I just need to know if I should throw these out.
What zones can statice be overwintered in without a high tunnel?