Lodi Mixed Dahlia

Nature & Nurture Seeds

Dahlia spp.

$5.99

Pkt (≈ seeds)

Save $ and start Dahlias from seeds! These dahlias are a fun mix of single and semi-double flowers in shades from lemon yellow, light pink and apricot orange to mulberry pink and dark red. They come in many difference sizes, shapes and forms.

Dahlias are edible! Besides being beautiful, dahlia petals and tubers are edible raw and cooked. Use the petals to beautify salads, cakes and to adorn any dish. Tubers are starchy and can be cooked as a root vegetable or eaten raw with a texture similar to water chestnuts.

These seeds come from our friend Lindsay Klaunig of Trouville Farm near Athens, Ohio. They are collected from her personal stock of favorite tubers selected for mix of colors and sizes. They will bloom late summer when started from seeds. 

Unlike tubers or cuttings, which produce an exact clone of the plant they come from, dahlias grown from seed offer a treasure trove of new possibilities, new colors, shapes, and forms for you to choose from! The opportunities are endless, and if you find one you love, you get to save it and name it!

Plants are 2-4' tall.

Days to maturity: 100

Sow seeds indoors 4/1-5/1, 1/4" deep (at 65-70°). Keep seeds moist until germination. Days to germination: 10-20. You will want to either start the seeds in large containers (4" pots) or start them in small containers and transplant them into larger containers. Transplant outside: Dahlia should be planted in a location with good drainage and/or raised beds so that the tubers don't rot. Dahlias are heavy feeders and appreciate generous doses of compost and organic fertilizer. Plant 5/20-6/5 in full sun, spaced 8-12" apart. Apply Sluggo to protect seedlings from slugs/snails. Stake dahlia plants before they get too big and fall over. They will bloom late summer when grown from seed. Since this is a dahlia mix you can pick out your favorite flowers and mark these plant tubers for digging in the fall. Dig dahlia tubers in the fall about 2 weeks after plants have died back from frost (but before the ground freezes). Cut the plant stems back to 2-4", carefully dig your tubers, and remove soil (and label your tubers if you want to keep track of them). Let tubers sit to dry in a warm location for 1-3 days with ample air flow. Then pack tubers in peat moss or vermiculite in ziplock bags or boxes. You want to pack them dry but store them in a way that retains moisture. Store them in a cool/cold (40-50°) location that won't freeze such as a cool basement, wine cooler, heated shed or garage, in the ground in a hoophouse, or in the fridge. Plant tubers outside mid to late May or plant them 4 weeks earlier inside in pots and plant those plants outside in late May.