Collection: Stock Seeds

Stock flowers are a favorite in cottage gardens, planted alongside paths or gates where their beauty and aroma can be enjoyed. These blooms come in shades ranging from soft pastels to vivid pinks and purples, providing a delicate pop of color. Stock flowers not only enhance gardens with their beauty but also attract beneficial pollinators like bees and butterflies. With their sturdy stems and long-lasting blooms, they make excellent cut flowers, brightening indoor spaces with their Victorian charm and subtle clove-like scent.

Growing stock seeds in your garden

  • Other names for these biennials include gilly flowers and hoary stock
  • As a member of the Brassica family, stock is edible, with pods having a radish-like taste and blossoms having a floral flavor
  • Stock blooms for approximately two months, beginning in spring and lasting until temperatures become too warm for them to endure
  • Stock can be grown as perennials, biennials, or half hardy annuals depending on the USDA zone

Growing stock seeds in your garden

  • Other names for these biennials include gilly flowers and hoary stock
  • As a member of the Brassica family, stock is edible, with pods having a radish-like taste and blossoms having a floral flavor
  • Stock blooms for approximately two months, beginning in spring and lasting until temperatures become too warm for them to endure
  • Stock can be grown as perennials, biennials, or half hardy annuals depending on the USDA zone

Stock flowers are a favorite in cottage gardens, planted alongside paths or gates where their beauty and aroma can be enjoyed. These blooms come in shades ranging from soft pastels to vivid pinks and purples, providing a delicate pop of color. Stock flowers not only enhance gardens with their beauty but also attract beneficial pollinators like bees and butterflies. With their sturdy stems and long-lasting blooms, they make excellent cut flowers, brightening indoor spaces with their Victorian charm and subtle clove-like scent.