Snapdragon "Rembrandt"
Snapdragon medium-sized "Rembrandt" - Antirrhinum majus L.
Want to try something interesting and unusual? Then add this charming variety to your flower arrangement!
Contrasting yellow-red flowers look spectacular in flowerbeds, in borders and in garden vases. The plant is 40-45 cm high, cultivated as an annual.
Numerous lateral shoots provide lush and long flowering.
Blooms from late June until late frosts, creating a feeling of continuous celebration.
Agrotechnics.
Snapdragon is cold-resistant, light-loving, undemanding to soils, needs watering during dry periods. Grown by seedlings. To obtain friendly shoots, seeds must be stratified at a temperature of + 10 °C.
Sowing is carried out from the beginning of March to mid-April superficially, without sealing, in boxes with substrate and put in the light. Shoots appear in 8-12 days.
Seedlings are planted in the second half of May with a distance of 20 cm between plants. This variety is well suited for cutting (stands in water for up to two weeks).
1.0 g = 4000-7000 seeds.
Want to try something interesting and unusual? Then add this charming variety to your flower arrangement!
Contrasting yellow-red flowers look spectacular in flowerbeds, in borders and in garden vases. The plant is 40-45 cm high, cultivated as an annual.
Numerous lateral shoots provide lush and long flowering.
Blooms from late June until late frosts, creating a feeling of continuous celebration.
Agrotechnics.
Snapdragon is cold-resistant, light-loving, undemanding to soils, needs watering during dry periods. Grown by seedlings. To obtain friendly shoots, seeds must be stratified at a temperature of + 10 °C.
Sowing is carried out from the beginning of March to mid-April superficially, without sealing, in boxes with substrate and put in the light. Shoots appear in 8-12 days.
Seedlings are planted in the second half of May with a distance of 20 cm between plants. This variety is well suited for cutting (stands in water for up to two weeks).
1.0 g = 4000-7000 seeds.
According to legend, the goddess Flora created this wonderful summer flower, a favorite of many gardeners, named so for its strangely shaped flowers, in honor of the heroic feat of Hercules.
The ancient Greeks used this flower as an amulet, bringing goodness, happiness and well-being to the house and protecting from evil.