
The Greater Pasque Flower Seeds Packet
The Greater Pasque seeds for the garden that has decided it deserves better than the garden centre allows. The Greater Pasque Flower is one of those plants that looks like it has been placed deliberately in the landscape by someone with considerably better taste than anyone in the vicinity.
The Greater Pasque is exquisite native perennial with silky purple flowers followed by feathery silver seed heads. Each packet is hermetically vacuum-sealed -- removing the oxygen that causes standard paper seed packets to lose germination viability within approximately one year. State law requires a 3-year viability label on sealed packaging. NASA research on hermetic seed storage indicates viability of up to 10 years under proper conditions. Every packet is non-GMO and germination-tested at independent third-party labs before it earns its Japanese woodblock print artwork.
How to Grow The Greater Pasque from Seed
Sowing and Germination
Sow fresh seed in autumn or cold stratify for 4 weeks before spring sowing. Well-drained alkaline soil.
Care and Harvest
Full sun, excellent drainage essential. Silky seed heads as decorative as the flowers. Drought tolerant once established.
Why Vacuum-Sealed Seeds Last Longer
Standard paper seed packets are permeable to oxygen and moisture -- the two primary causes of seed degradation. Most paper-packaged seeds begin losing germination viability after approximately one year, contributing to significant garden-industry waste: packets purchased, not planted, expired, discarded. Shido Seeds are hermetically vacuum-sealed. The packet does not expire quietly in a drawer. It waits.
About the Packaging
Every Shido seed packet is illustrated in the style of Japanese 1910s woodblock printing -- designed and drawn in-house by Chive, the Toronto ceramics studio that has been exhibiting at the Chelsea Flower Show in London every year and does not, as a matter of principle, sell to big-box retailers. Customers collect the packets as a series. This was not the original plan.
Original: $4.95
-65%$4.95
$1.73Product Information
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Shipping & Returns
Description
The Greater Pasque seeds for the garden that has decided it deserves better than the garden centre allows. The Greater Pasque Flower is one of those plants that looks like it has been placed deliberately in the landscape by someone with considerably better taste than anyone in the vicinity.
The Greater Pasque is exquisite native perennial with silky purple flowers followed by feathery silver seed heads. Each packet is hermetically vacuum-sealed -- removing the oxygen that causes standard paper seed packets to lose germination viability within approximately one year. State law requires a 3-year viability label on sealed packaging. NASA research on hermetic seed storage indicates viability of up to 10 years under proper conditions. Every packet is non-GMO and germination-tested at independent third-party labs before it earns its Japanese woodblock print artwork.
How to Grow The Greater Pasque from Seed
Sowing and Germination
Sow fresh seed in autumn or cold stratify for 4 weeks before spring sowing. Well-drained alkaline soil.
Care and Harvest
Full sun, excellent drainage essential. Silky seed heads as decorative as the flowers. Drought tolerant once established.
Why Vacuum-Sealed Seeds Last Longer
Standard paper seed packets are permeable to oxygen and moisture -- the two primary causes of seed degradation. Most paper-packaged seeds begin losing germination viability after approximately one year, contributing to significant garden-industry waste: packets purchased, not planted, expired, discarded. Shido Seeds are hermetically vacuum-sealed. The packet does not expire quietly in a drawer. It waits.
About the Packaging
Every Shido seed packet is illustrated in the style of Japanese 1910s woodblock printing -- designed and drawn in-house by Chive, the Toronto ceramics studio that has been exhibiting at the Chelsea Flower Show in London every year and does not, as a matter of principle, sell to big-box retailers. Customers collect the packets as a series. This was not the original plan.























