- Maintenance tips & tricks
- 4-season garden care advice
- News from the gardening world
- STIGA innovations & new product launches
FREE delivery on selected models
Free returns
Premium delivery available
FREE delivery on selected models
Free returns
Premium delivery available
As you wait for the weather to warm up, turn a few corners of your home into mini-indoor gardens. Here are five seeds to plant inside in February that will transform into delicious produce and beautiful flowers later in the year.
The key to growing healthy seedlings is keeping them warm. If you don’t have access to a heated propagator, you can use a bright windowsill or the top of a refrigerator for warmth. Once your seeds have matured into young plants, they can be transferred to cold frames in the garden to help harden them before being planted in the ground.
February is a great month for sowing tomato seeds. The seedlings won’t require light whilst they germinate, but warmth is essential.
Put a layer of seed compost in a starting tray and dampen it
Make holes of around 5mm deep and plant up to three seeds per hole
Your seeds should germinate within two weeks
As soon as the seedlings break the surface, place them on a sunny windowsill for their next stage of growth
Kale is super nutritious and known for its hardy nature, but February tends to be too chilly for it to prosper outside.
Start kale off indoors by sowing seeds in modules or 7cm pots
Use 2–3 seeds per module
They can be transplanted around 6–8 weeks later
There nothing quite like the delicate scent of sweet peas on a warm summer’s evening – and growing them from seeds couldn’t be easier.
Help activate germination by nicking the seed coat with a knife – just be sure to avoid the ‘eye’ area.
Sow the seeds in good quality, peat-free compost and then place in a heated propagator or on a sunny windowsill.
Carboard tubes or biodegradable pots make ideal containers for sweet pea seeds, because they can be planted outside directly in their pots when the warm weather arrives.
Salvias make a glorious addition to borders because of their height and vibrant petals. Varieties you can sow in February include Salvia splendens, Salvia farinacea and Salvia patens.
Place the seeds on top of seed compost, then cover with a very fine layer of compost
Grow in a light, warm spot
Keep the compost well drained but moist
Cosmos are very easy to grow and look fantastic in borders. They also provide nectar and pollen, so are a wonderful choice to attract bees.
Cosmos seeds need light in order to germinate
Sow them on top of seed compost in a tray
Once they’ve sprouted, transplant them into individual 7cm pots and grow them under cover