Collecting and Saving Bachelor’s Button Seeds
When collecting bachelor’s button seeds, it’s important to let the flowers fade naturally on the plant. Bachelor’s buttons will produce new flowers all summer long if you cut the old ones, so it’s a good idea to harvest the seeds toward the end of the growing season. When one of your flowers heads has faded and dried up, cut it off of the stalk. You won’t see the seeds right away because they’re actually inside the flower. With the fingers of one hand, rub the flower against the palm of the other hand so the dried flower crumbles away. This should reveal a few small seeds – hard little oblong shapes with a tuft of hairs coming off one end, a little like a stubby paintbrush. Saving bachelor’s button seeds is easy. Leave them on a plate for a couple days to dry, then seal them in an envelope until you’re ready to use them.
Bachelor’s Button Seed Propagation
In warm climates, bachelor’s button seeds can be planted in the fall to come up in the spring. In colder climates, they can be sown a couple weeks before the last frost date. The plants do best in hot weather, so starting bachelor’s button seeds indoors to get an early start isn’t really necessary.