Saving Marigold Seeds From Your Backyard Garden

Saving marigold seeds is a fun and frugal way to enrich your garden the following gardening season.  Today, I’m sharing flower garden tips on how to save marigold seeds from your backyard garden plants.  French marigolds find a place in my vegetable garden and backyard containers each year.  I companion plant marigolds with my tomato plants.  But, I also love them in containers on my deck paired with a sweet potato vine.

There are actually 50 varieties of marigolds; however, three are the most popular.  Marigolds have a daisy or carnation flower that are produced  as a single flower or in cluster.  They are natives of Mexico and prefer sunny locations.  They should receive at least 6 to 8 hours of direct sunlight each day.

 

 

saving marigold seeds

 

 

Here are the three varieties of marigolds:

  • French – Plant throughout the spring and summer.  Dwarf only growing about a foot.
  • American – Plant in the spring.  Tall, usually grows to about 3 feet.
  • Signet  – Plant throughout the spring and summer.   Flat and look like daisies.

The French marigolds are more compact than the American or Signet varieties.  I love them planted among my tall tomato plants.  You can direct sow marigolds in the spring when all signs of frost has past or start them inside.  If you direct sow, preparing the soil by removing rocks and debris and adding compost to the soil will help you grow a healthy and hardy garden full of marigolds.

 

Here’s a few benefits on why you should plant marigolds in your garden:

  • They’re easy to grow and be can direct sowed in the garden.
  • Repel pests.
  • Companion plant with tomatoes, cucumbers, strawberries, snap beans, squash, onions, and garlic.
  • Marigolds can be dried for flower arrangements.
  • Comes in a variety of colors like white, yellow, orange, or bi-color.
  • Bees, butterflies, and other pollinators love to feast on the nectar in the blooms.

 

 

backyard garden marigolds

 

 

Saving marigold seeds from you backyard garden:

Pull marigold plants from your garden and containers at the end of the growing season.  I plant yellow and orange marigolds for the most part.  However, I did plant a bi-color this year too.

 

marigold plants

 

Pull the dead/dried pods from the plants.  You will harvest the seed from these pods.  If you have flowers or pods that aren’t completely dry, place the plants in a bag and allow them to dry completely.  You can remove the seeds later.

 

marigold seeds

 

Remove the top from the dried pods.  A simple twist should remove the top.  Once the top is removed, open the pod to expose the marigold seeds.

 

saving marigold seeds

 

 

Also, the marigold seeds are long with a black tip.  You will want to separate the seeds from the pod and tips.  Once you have the seeds separated, place them into an airtight container, plastic envelope or paper envelope.  Mark the container with 2019 and the type of seed that you saved.  For example, 2019 Yellow French or 2019 Bi-Color Signet.

 

 

saving marigold seeds

 

So, saving marigold seeds from year to year will save you money on flower purchases from the garden center or your local nursery.  You will find that the marigold plants will reward you with plenty of seeds.  You will have enough to share with neighbors, family or friends for years to come.  Plant them in containers, baskets and in your vegetable garden and borders.  You can never have enough marigolds in your wildlife habitat and gardens.

Finally, you may also like Why You Should Winter Sow Seeds.  If you would like a package of free marigold seeds, please contact me at rhonda@mother2motherblog.com.

 

 

 

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Comments

  1. Who doesn’t love some free plants?  Thanks for sharing with #TheGardenYear 🙂

  2. some years I’m over run with marigolds then others there is nothing, then the following year they just pop up again #thegardenyear

    • Rhonda Gales says

      Oh wow, I never have marigolds reseed.  At least, not that I can remember. In my area, they are true annuals.  Thanks so much for stopping by.  Please visit again.  I followed you on Instagram.

  3. I have been saving Marigold seeds for years. My process is a lot easier. I dry the heads then remove the dried petals. I same them that way in a paper envelope. The next spring I just stir the seeds into the soil of my planters or sprinkle them over my garden after I have planted my vegetable seeds. They come up with the spring rain and really grow them selves. In the garden they help deter insects and protect my plants from aphids. – Margy

    • Rhonda Gales says

      Your method of seed saving does sound easier.  I love to share my seeds, so I separate and package them for community seed exchanges as well as for myself.  I love being able to see how many seeds I have and what colors I have saved.  I always mark my envelopes with the information.  Thanks for sharing your method though. I’m always eager to learn new gardening techniques.  Please stop by again.

  4. Rhonda, I wish I’d read this several weeks ago. But no worries, I’ll Pin it to have it handy for next year. Like you, I companion plant marigolds with my tomatoes. This year I got a color I especially loved–I think it was called Vanilla Cream, a very pale yellow.

    • Rhonda Gales says

      Hi Jean.  I don’t think that I’ve seen the Vanilla Cream Marigolds in my area.  Sounds pretty.  I’ll have to search for those seeds this winter.  Maybe you can save me a few seeds next summer if you plan them again.  Thanks for stopping by.