Nobel Giant
Flowers

Nobel Giant

$4.00

Nobel Giant zinnia — massive, dahlia-like blooms up to 5 inches across in rich, saturated colors. These are the showpiece zinnias for anyone who wants dramatic, jaw-dropping cut flowers. Growing tips: Same easy care as all zinnias — direct sow in warm soil, full sun, good air circulation. Nobel Giants grow 3-4 feet tall and may need staking in windy locations. The huge, fully double blooms last exceptionally long as cut flowers — up to two weeks in a vase. Cut in the morning when flowers are just fully open. These are the zinnias you bring to a dinner party and everyone asks about.

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Contact us to check availability and arrange pickup. We sell locally in Big Pine, CA.

More Flowers

Sunflowers

Cheerful, towering sunflowers that are the ultimate garden showstopper. A magnet for pollinators, birds, and smiles. Varieties include: Mongolian Giant (immense 8-12+ feet tall with dinner-plate-sized heads and bright yellow petals — great for shade and dramatic focal points), Red Torch (stunning red and yellow bicolor blooms — attractive to pollinators; WARNING: do not eat this variety), and Ring of Fire (striking red and yellow flame pattern, 4-6 feet tall — excellent cut flowers). Growing tips: Direct sow after last frost — sunflowers grow fast and do not like transplanting. Mongolian Giants need staking or support in windy areas. Our Owens Valley sun produces excellent sunflowers with strong stalks and heavy seed heads. Leave spent heads for the birds in fall, or harvest seeds for roasting. All varieties prefer full sun and well-drained soil.

Marigold

Bright, cheerful marigolds that earn their place in every garden as both beauty and bodyguard. They repel many common pests, attract pollinators, and bloom nonstop from planting to frost. Growing tips: Marigolds are one of the most foolproof annual flowers. Direct sow or transplant after last frost. Deadhead spent blooms to keep them flowering. French marigolds (smaller) are best for pest deterrence near vegetables; African marigolds (taller) make a bigger visual impact. In our climate, marigolds thrive on neglect — they prefer less water and lean soil. Plant them around tomatoes, peppers, and squash as companion plants.

Calendula Marigold

Medicinal calendula (pot marigold) with edible orange and yellow petals — not to be confused with common marigolds. Calendula is used in healing salves, skin care products, herbal teas, and as a beautiful edible flower. Growing tips: Calendula is one of the most useful plants in the garden. The petals have anti-inflammatory and skin-healing properties — infuse them in olive oil for a soothing salve. Scatter fresh petals in salads for a pop of color, or use as a natural food coloring (sometimes called "poor man's saffron"). Calendula prefers cool weather and blooms best in spring and fall. In our climate, it self-sows readily and often pops up in unexpected places — a welcome volunteer.

Zinnia

Vibrant, long-lasting zinnias in a rainbow of colors that bloom from midsummer until frost. The ultimate cut-and-come-again flower — the more you cut, the more they bloom. Growing tips: Direct sow after last frost — zinnias grow fast in warm soil. They are tailor-made for our Owens Valley climate: they love heat, full sun, and can handle our alkaline soil. Space plants for good air circulation to prevent powdery mildew. Deadhead regularly or, better yet, cut armloads of flowers for the house — cutting encourages more blooms. Mix heights and colors for a cottage-garden look. Zinnias attract butterflies like no other flower.