A brand new addition to our perennial meadow seed mixes, Lime Light, shines bright for lovers of subtle colour and forms. Whites, greys, creams and lime greens are dominant, artfully accented with flashes of copper, orange, red and bronze to give seasonal variation. This is medium height meadow for average soils which will provide a restful complement to other more exuberant colour themed meadows. As with many of our mixes, this meadow also provides a fantastic source of cut flowers throughout the flowering season and a great source of seed for our birds later in the year.
We’re making room for exciting new seed mixes in the near future.
Our Lime Light mix will be discontinued once all our stock has been sold.
Recommended sowing time: Autumn - all year.
Recommended sowing rate: 2g per square metre.
A brand new addition to our perennial meadow seed mixes, Lime Light, shines bright for lovers of subtle colour and forms. Whites, greys, creams and lime greens are dominant, artfully accented with flashes of copper, orange, red and bronze to give seasonal variation. This is medium height meadow for average soils which will provide a restful complement to other more exuberant colour themed meadows. As with many of our mixes, this meadow also provides a fantastic source of cut flowers throughout the flowering season and a great source of seed for our birds later in the year.
We’re making room for exciting new seed mixes in the near future.
Our Lime Light mix will be discontinued once all our stock has been sold.
Recommended sowing time: Autumn - all year.
Recommended sowing rate: 2g per square metre.
No. If you are trying to establish a proper perennial meadow then do not put annual seeds with the mix. Annuals will very quickly out compete the slower perennials and create bare patches in the sward later in the season which will encourage weed infestation.
No. Grass is very competitive and will quickly dominate.
It’s best to stick to the 2 grams a metre rule as that’s how we’ve formulated the meadow designs. Do not under sow a perennial meadow as you wont get the all important number of species to grow and cover the ground. If in doubt its always better to over sow a perennial meadow than under sow.
No, even though the mix recipe will be the same, everyone’s meadow will develop its own unique characteristics and these will continue to change throughout the year, and year to year.
No. We have sown meadows in areas that were afterwards visited by big flocks of birds and in areas where mice and squirrels were particularly happy and so were our meadows in the end.
Most of the Pictorial Meadows mixes have been specially designed to perform on normal to high fertility soils making them perfect solutions for most gardens and parks. The richer the soil though the taller and bushier the plants will be especially in year one. The thinner and poorer the soil the opposite will happen. It is best to select a mix to start with that best sits your soil and then to sustain the annual cut and collect. After a few years even on the most fertile soils you will see the composition and structure changing as fertility start to decrease and the emerging meadows look finer and shorter.
Love these seed mixes and have used them for years. I am not a great gardener and they are the only ones that work for me. I moved to town last year, planting cornfield and classic along my front border, so I could see them from my office. We are now known as the house with the flowers!! Thank you Pictorial Meadows.
This is a fantastic mix. Have just seen it at Wentbridge Castle in the John Arnold Gardens. The display brings tears to your eyes. Will be pursuing the mix for my own garden as a reduction in maintenance of my quarter acre is on the cards. Wentworth Castle is a great place to visit to. April /May is the best time.
Have just visited Kedleston Hall & was stopped in my tracks by the most wonderful display of poppies etc.The head gardener told me they had come from your company.So many other people were commenting on the wonderful show of flowers& taking pictures of them.Utterly wonderful for us humans but also for the many bees & other flying insects that were visiting them.