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Anna Sandner
Guide

Collecting wildflowers seeds is this easy – and free

Anna Sandner
11.9.2025
Translation: Elicia Payne
Pictures: Anna Sandner

Now is the perfect time to collect wildflower seeds. After a little ramble in nature, you can be sure to find colourful flowers for next year and help biodiversity at the same time – it’s super easy and doesn’t cost a thing.

Flower seeds galore: self-service in wild meadows

Half a dozen people gather to stroll through the wildflower meadows of the city park under expert guidance and pick out the late summer treasures. Everyone can gather as much as they want – and take their goods home with them. The idea’s simple: next year, Hamburg will be even wilder and more colourful next year.

We wander through the meadows for two hours, learning something new at every turn. From chicory to campion and the bristly, proud viper’s bugloss, my bags fill up faster than I expected. To begin with, I collect some species separately in small paper bags. After a while, I start a «mixed bag». There are so many different flowers that I don’t want to waste time sorting. Plus, I’ll mix the seeds again when I sow them anyway.

Wildflower supply – now is peak season

Late summer is the best time to collect them. The seed heads are just waiting to be taken away. My tip is, if you want to go and pick some, don’t forget gloves and scissors, otherwise some species such as viper’s bugloss and wild carrot can really prick you.

I used small envelopes and slightly larger sandwich bags to store them. To prevent mould, you should pack your goods in air-permeable packaging. Even if the seeds are best planted in the fall, you can save them until the following spring.

If you don’t want to collect the seeds yourself, you can, of course, simply have them delivered to your home:

Book tip for wildflower fans

Everything look the same to you? No problem, you can have a guide at your hand.

Practical tip: how to create a wild meadow

  • Store seeds in a dry place at home.
  • Thin out the soil (dethatch or dig lightly).
  • In the fall, sow in a wide-spread pattern and only press down lightly – many wildflowers need light!
  • No fertiliser, little to no watering.
  • Wait patiently for spring: it usually takes until May or June for the first splashes of colour to appear.

I’m absolutely delighted with my yield and I’m already looking forward to next year’s beautiful flowers.

Header image: Anna Sandner

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Science editor and biologist. I love animals and am fascinated by plants, their abilities and everything you can do with them. That's why my favourite place is always the outdoors - somewhere in nature, preferably in my wild garden.


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