flower

Poppy

Papaver spp.

Poppies are some of the most romantic and evocative flowers in the garden — their papery, tissue-thin petals in vivid reds, oranges, pinks, and whites have an ephemeral beauty that lasts just a few days per bloom but is utterly unforgettable. Annual poppies like the Flanders poppy (P. rhoeas) and California poppy (Eschscholzia) are sown directly from March to May and flower that same summer. Scatter the tiny seeds thinly over bare, raked soil and don't cover them — they need light to germinate. Perennial Oriental poppies (P. orientale) are much larger plants with enormous, blousy flowers in June, often with dramatic dark blotches. They die back completely after flowering, leaving a gap in the border — plan for neighbours to fill in. All poppies hate being transplanted (they have deep taproots), so sow where they're to grow. They thrive in poor soil and full sun. The seed heads are architectural — leave them for structure and for finches to feed from.

Plan where to grow Poppy using our vegetable garden planner.

SunlightFull sun
WateringLow
Height60cm
Spacing30cm
Germination7–14 days (needs light)
Sowing MethodDirect sow
Frost HardinessHardy
Sowing DepthSurface sow (needs light to germinate)

When to Sow Poppy

Sow poppy in March, April, May, September.

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Sowing months

Time to Harvest Poppy

Expect to harvest approximately 3 months after sowing.

Expected Yield

Self-seeds freely; each plant produces multiple blooms over several weeks.

Common Problems with Poppy

Self-seeding too aggressively

Remove seed pods before they ripen if you want to control spread. Or enjoy the volunteers!

Aphids

Common on annual poppies. Usually minor — blast off with water.

Transplant failure

Poppies have deep taproots and hate being moved. Always sow where they're to grow.

Plan your poppy in the allotment planner

Drag and drop plants onto your plot and get personalised sowing reminders.

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