Farleygreenfingers
Newly Registered
Posts: 3
Joined: Thu Jul 09, 2015 4:42 pm
Location: Surrey, England

Have I made a school boy error?

Hello all,

We've recently moved and our new home boasted the most amazing bed of bearded irises.

Impressive I thought, oooh seed pods I thought, they've turned green, now they look untidy I thought, so I cut them......all of them :roll:

Have I ruined any chance of getting seeds from them by my impatience? or can I dry the pods out in the greenhouse and salvage them?

Thank you for any advice you can provide, including how to plant these (if there is anything left to plant :cry: )

User avatar
GardeningCook
Greener Thumb
Posts: 787
Joined: Wed Apr 29, 2015 8:35 pm
Location: Upper Piedmont area of Virginia, Zone 7a

Yeah - you've kind of made an error. The seeds really do need to ripen in the pod on the plant in order to be viable.

However, Bearded Iris are even easier to propagate via division of their rhizomes (bulbous roots), which should be done every few years anyway & provide much sooner plant gratification than seed, so you may want to nix the seed idea & just do some dividing. Here are a few links:

https://www.wikihow.com/Divide-Bearded-Irises

https://www.bhg.com/gardening/flowers/pe ... rded-iris/

https://www.gardeningknowhow.com/ornamen ... irises.htm

https://www.irises.org/About_Irises/Cult ... arded.html

User avatar
rainbowgardener
Super Green Thumb
Posts: 25279
Joined: Sun Feb 15, 2009 6:04 pm
Location: TN/GA 7b

I will just welcome you to the forum and second what G.Cook said. The seed pods needed to stay on the plant until they ripened (turned brown and started to split a little) to be viable.

However, iris is rarely grown from seed. Most people don't even let them produce seed pods, but cut the flower stalks off as soon as the flowers are done. Putting out seed takes some vigor from the plant. Iris multiply rapidly (almost TOO rapidly) from the rhizomes. You can just keep digging and dividing them, which is done in the early fall when the plant is going dormant.

Iris are very slow from seed. Had you allowed the seed pods to ripen and planted the seeds (in the fall, so they can have a cold winter, which they need for germination), you would have teeny baby plants in the spring, which would need a lot of nurturing and protection.

Image
https://spacegurrrl.files.wordpress.com ... dlings.jpg

If they made it, MAYBE you would have iris flowers on your new plants in spring of 2017 and maybe not until 2018. AND iris in people's gardens are almost all hybrids, which means the flowers on the plants you raised from seed would not look like that parents (and you don't even know who the "daddy" was!). You might be pretty disappointed in it.

Just one caution. Don't start "neatening" the iris leaves. You can trim back the tops a little when they turn brown. But the iris needs those leaves to feed the rhizome to give vigor for next years plants. In the fall when the plant is dormant, you can cut it back to fans.

Image
https://www.lowes.com/creative-ideas/ima ... 3711-2.jpg

If you are digging/ dividing/ transplanting, you should cut it back to fans like that (4-6" tall), so that the rhizome doesn't have too much leaf to provide for.

Best wishes!



Return to “Seed Starting Discussions”