Pros:

  • Massive quantities of flowers for about 3 months
  • Bees love the blooms
  • The plant doesn’t need any care to thrive
  • We’ve transplanted a few of the seedlings. They’re true to their parent in terms of color, but the parents seems like a double bloom and the children seem like single bloom
  • If you want a hedge, this seems like a good option

Cons:

  • Seeds! So many seeds. Each of its hundreds (thousands?) of flowers will produce 10+ seeds. They all don’t germinate, but it’s a numbers game. If you want to avoid pulling volunteers up you’re best off pulling the seed pods off the plant before they open on their own

I pulled ~2 gallons of seed pods off a week prior to this picture. My wife dumped them in the compost, so no epic 5+ gallon photo 😭

  • @IMALlamaOP
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    23 months ago

    No idea. The green seeds are not that big, but they are soft. Once they’re mature they turn pretty hard. Green they would be hard to process/remove from the seed pods.

    • @strawberrysocial
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      13 months ago

      I guess being that small even if they were edible it wouldn’t be worth it shelling them and such. I do lament there being no full 5 gallon photo 😄

      • @IMALlamaOP
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        23 months ago

        If they’re edible dry, it should be fairly straightforward to build something to crush the pods and then sift out the seeds. Perhaps they could be milled into a type of flour? I still don’t think the yield would be that high, but at least some use would come of them.