SKU: 49665107740
pink wildflower seeds

pink wildflower seeds Sweet William Pinks Wildflower Seed

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Description

pink wildflower seeds Sweet William Pinks Wildflower SeedSweet William is a biennial or short lived perennial flowering plant admired for its colorful and fragrant blooms. Sweet William produces clusters of small, densely packed flowers in shades of pink, red, white, and bi colors. The flowers have a delightful spicy fragrance and a fringed or serrated edge.~~~ Sweet William is a biennial or short lived perennial flowering plant admired for its colorful and fragrant blooms. Sweet William produces clusters

Sweet William is a biennial or short-lived perennial flowering plant admired for its colorful and fragrant blooms. Sweet William produces clusters of small, densely packed flowers in shades of pink, red, white, and bi-colors. The flowers have a delightful spicy fragrance and a fringed or serrated edge.~~~

Sweet William is a biennial or short-lived perennial flowering plant admired for its colorful and fragrant blooms. Sweet William produces clusters of small, densely packed flowers in shades of pink, red, white, and bi-colors. The flowers have a delightful spicy fragrance and a fringed or serrated edge.

Product Information

  • Botanic Name: Dianthus barbatus
  • Application or Use: Ornamental, Garden Flower, Landscaping, Cut Flower
  • Germination Time: 7 - 14 days, under optimal conditions; seeds may lay dormant for years prior to germination
  • Growing Locations: Warm Season, Transition Zone, Cool Season
  • Height: 2 feet
  • Sunlight Requirements: 8+ hours, full sun for best results, adaptable to both sun and partial shade.
  • Advantages: Adapted to many soil types; showy blooms, excellent for landscaping; attracts pollinators.
  • When to Plant: See instructions tab. 

 

Sweet William is a biennial or short-lived perennial flowering plant admired for its colorful and fragrant blooms. Sweet William produces clusters of small, densely packed flowers in shades of pink, red, white, and bi-colors. The flowers have a delightful spicy fragrance and a fringed or serrated edge.

The plant typically grows to heights of about 12 to 24 inches, forming compact clumps of foliage and flowers.

Sweet William blooms from late spring to early summer, showcasing its colorful and fragrant flowers. Some varieties may continue blooming sporadically through the summer months.

The plant's foliage consists of narrow, lance-shaped leaves that are typically gray-green in color.

Sweet William thrives in well-drained soil and prefers full sun to partial shade. It's relatively adaptable and can grow in various soil types.

Sweet William is popular in cottage gardens, borders, and as a cut flower due to its colorful, fragrant blooms. It's also used in floral arrangements and can attract butterflies and bees.

This plant is generally low-maintenance. Deadheading spent blooms can encourage prolonged blooming, and dividing clumps every few years can rejuvenate the plant.

Sweet William is beloved for its vibrant and fragrant flowers, its suitability for cottage-style gardens, and its ability to attract pollinators, making it a charming addition to garden landscapes.

*Product packaging may appear different than what is pictured. ~~~

Wildflower Planting Time Based on Region:

Southeast

  • Fall, Winter: Sowing wildflowers in Fall/Winter is the ideal time in the Southeast, with October 1 – December 31 being the best dates. The weather is ideal for starting seeds, and seedlings can grow and harden off before frost.
  • Spring: A good time to plant wildflowers, especially annual species that flower quickly. Plant after the last frost date when soil temperatures have warmed to around 55°F, typically occurring within a month or so after the final frost of winter; this ensures the seeds can germinate properly without being affected by cold weather.
  • Summer: You can plant wildflower seeds in the summer, but the hot sun can dry out the soil and stress your seedlings. Summer is a good time to plant quick-growing annual wildflowers.

 

Southwest

  • Fall: A good time to plant spring wildflowers in the desert Southwest. Fall's cooler temperatures and seasonal rains help seeds germinate. In the mountains, you can plant after spring frosts.
  • Winter: In areas that get snow, winter seeding can give seeds an advantage in the spring. 
  • Spring: A popular time to plant wildflowers in most states. You can plant after the last frost and when the soil temperature is at least 55°F. In warmer climates, you can plant at the end of the rainy season.
  • Summer: You can plant wildflower seeds in the summer, but the hot sun can dry out the soil and stress your seedlings. Summer is a good time to plant quick-growing annual wildflowers.

 

Northeast

  • Fall, Winter: The best time to plant wildflowers in the Northeast is in late fall, after the first frost but before heavy snow. This is known as dormant seeding and can take place from November to December. Cold temperatures and damp soil during the winter help wildflower seeds germinate. 
  • Spring: Plant in early spring, after the ground has thawed and soil temperatures reach around 55-65°F. This is a popular time to plant wildflowers because it's typically rainier, which helps water seedlings. 
  • Summer: You can plant wildflower seeds in the summer, but the hot sun can dry out the soil and stress your seedlings. Summer is a good time to plant quick-growing annual wildflowers.

 

Midwest

  • Fall, Winter: Plant in late fall (November–December) after the first frost. The seeds will overwinter and germinate in the spring. Fall planting is a good option for cooler climates and can give the seeds an early start in the spring. 
  • Spring: Plant in early spring (April–May) after the last frost when the soil temperature is consistently above 55°F. Spring is a popular time to plant because the soil is usually moist from rain, and you can see the wildflowers grow right away.
  • Summer: You can plant wildflower seeds in the summer, but the hot sun can dry out the soil and stress your seedlings. Summer is a good time to plant quick-growing annual wildflowers.

 

Western

  • Fall, Winter: Plant in late fall (November–December) after the first frost. The seeds will overwinter and germinate in the spring. Fall planting is a good option for cooler climates and can give the seeds an early start in the spring. 
  • Spring: Plant in early spring (April–May) after the last frost when the soil temperature is consistently above 55°F. Spring is a popular time to plant because the soil is usually moist from rain, and you can see the wildflowers grow right away.
  • Summer: You can plant wildflower seeds in the summer, but the hot sun can dry out the soil and stress your seedlings. Summer is a good time to plant quick-growing annual wildflowers.

 

Pacific Northwest

  • Fall, Winter: Plant in late fall (November–December) after the first frost. The seeds will overwinter and germinate in the spring. Fall planting is a good option for cooler climates and can give the seeds an early start in the spring. 
  • Spring: Plant in early spring (April–May) after the last frost when the soil temperature is consistently above 55°F. Spring is a popular time to plant because the soil is usually moist from rain, and you can see the wildflowers grow right away.
  • Summer: In cooler zones with higher elevation, you can plant wildflowers in late spring to early summer, after the risk of frost has passed. You can plant wildflower seeds in the summer, but the hot sun can dry out the soil and stress your seedlings. Summer is a good time to plant quick-growing annual wildflowers.

 

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J
Jiewen Wang
Massapequa, US
★★★★★ 5
a comprehensive guide at the intersection of generative AI and cybersecurity
Format: Kindle
This book blends deep theoretical foundations with practical frameworks and forward-looking strategies. From adversarial risk models to actionable guidance using OWASP Top 10 for LLMs and the NIST AI RMF, it offers both technical depth and operational clarity. What makes it stand out is its balance of academic rigor and real-world CISO insights, providing a holistic perspective on securing GenAI systems. While it leans enterprise-focused, the content remains accessible to security engineers, risk managers, and policy leaders alike. Generative AI Security is a timely and essential read for anyone working to deploy GenAI responsibly—building systems with both power and integrity in today’s fast-evolving threat landscape.
WAS THIS REVIEW HELPFUL?YesReportShare
Reviewed in the United States on July 2, 2025
N
Nader
Massapequa, US
★★★★★ 1
Light on substance and heavy on flaws
Format: Paperback
The book has a great list of topics, but fails to provide much substance any of them. Most of the provided code is just comments that avoid the actual crux of the issues being discussed. (e.g. #implement the logic to validate XYZ - while the whole point of this chapter is teach how the heck we validate XYZ!) Some parts are plain wrong, for example the part on Graph based RAG is fundamentally flawed as it assumes the text embedding and the graph embedding are in the same latent space. (This is one of many more examples). Seems like the book was rushed, and the author has limited hands on experience (if any). At least we know based on the amount of flaws that it was not written by an LLM
WAS THIS REVIEW HELPFUL?YesReportShare
Reviewed in the United States on December 31, 2025
N
noam barkay
Charlottesville, US
★★★★★ 5
Excellent book to truly understand LLM design patterns
Format: Paperback
I just finished reviewing Ken Huang's pocket book on LLM Design Patterns, and WOW what an amazing resource! This book is excellent if you want to truly understand how to create and enhance intelligent AI language models, all that in your pocket! Ken makes the difficult things seem surprisingly easy, and that's the real MAGIC. - How to prepare your data for training by making it extremely clean. Developing the brains: the practical aspects of training, optimizing, and maintaining your models. - Learn amazing prompting techniques (such as Chain-of-Thought and Tree-of-Thoughts) to improve your AI's reasoning and problem-solving abilities. Learn everything there is to know about RAGs so that your LLM can incorporate outside expertise. - It also delves into creating "agentic" AI that is capable of action and planning (not only simple plan and execute but also enhanced techniques like ReWoo!) Really, this feels like a useful toolkit, so Ken thank you for that resource Thanks, Idan Habler
WAS THIS REVIEW HELPFUL?YesReportShare
Reviewed in the United States on June 9, 2025
R
Ryan Meyer
Dallas, US
★★★★★ 3
A Broad Overview, But Light on Modern Fine-Tuning
Format: Paperback
I'm currently really interested in fine-tuning LLMs and recently completed my first LoRA-based fine-tuning on a quantized model. I came to this book looking for more detail on fine-tuning. While it touches on the topic, I found the content didn’t quite align with the current state of the field in 2025. Techniques like LoRA, QLoRA, and PEFT weren’t really covered, and the material leaned more toward what I think are older or lower level approaches. That made it harder to connect with what I’m actually working on. That said, when I shifted to other chapters — like the sections on prompt engineering techniques such as Chain of Thought (CoT) and Tree of Thought (ToT) — I found more value. These sections were clearer, and I picked up a few practical insights, like using few-shot examples that walk through the CoT reasoning process. That’s not something I’ve tried before, and I can see how it might help smaller models that struggle with any type of reasoning tasks. Overall, the book feels more like a broad overview of all LLM concepts. For someone exploring many topics across the LLM ecosystem, it offers a wide-ranging introduction. But for readers like me who are actively trying to learn and apply techniques like fine-tuning and quantization, it may leave you wanting up-to-date guidance.
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Reviewed in the United States on August 10, 2025
V
Vineeth Sai
West Palm Beach, US
★★★★★ 5
Great foundation read for security!
Format: Paperback
This book is a great read! It builds a strong foundation and I would highly recommend it for builders who are interetsed in building on LLMs and ensuring everything is secure. Security is super important and this book does it justice!
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Reviewed in the United States on June 27, 2025

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