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Plants Flower For Three: Propagation and growing: sow seed in late spring, in well-drained, rich soil. If seed is not required, remove the flower stems as they appear. Self-sown seedlings will grow freely if the plants flower for three are allowed to flower; if not, propagate them by dividing the parent plants flower for three approximately every three years or so. The seeds are ready to harvest when they have turned a gray-green color and have hardened. Cut off the whole flower head and dry slowly indoors.
Paper moons (Scabiosa stellata 'Drumstick') are a new garden flower cultivar. When the plants flower for three are in bloom they look like a rather washed-out scabiosa (the pin-cushion flower), in an unattractive shade of blue. But they soon ripen into bronze-colored, round seed heads that look more like coral fossils than plants flower for three. Stems reach 40 inches in length. Space the plants flower for three 8 inches apart. They are hardy annuals.
Annuals are plants flower for three with a short life but a merry one. In the space of a few months they grow, flower and die, leaving the ground free for further cultivation, if necessary, and for other plants flower for three. Biennials are plants flower for three which must be renewed annually from seed, since they die after they have flowered and set seed. In this they resemble annuals, but biennials take over a year to complete their cycle of growth. Seed sown one year will produce plants flower for three that will flower the next year, ripen their seed, and die before the second winter.
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