Plant cosmos seeds
How to Grow and Care for Cosmos
Cosmos are freely flowering annuals that are easy to grow by sprinkling some seeds in the garden after any danger of frost has passed. These quintessential cottage garden flowers reach full maturity in about two months. Cosmos can be slower to germinate, but it blooms quickly after that and continues to flower through the fall. The flowers sit atop long slender stems and form a cloud of attractive color all summer that attracts bees, butterflies, and birds to your garden. Cosmos flowers look a lot like daisies. They come in a broad range of colors, with more cultivars developed every year. The leaves grow opposite on stems and are deeply lobed, pinnate, or bipinnate and feathery-looking depending on the type. If you plan to have cosmos and live in the southern U.S., consider keeping them as potted plants since they tend to be invasive there.
Common Name | Cosmos, Mexican aster, cut-leaf cosmos |
Botanical Name | Cosmos sulphureus, Cosmos bipinnatus |
Family | Asteraceae |
Plant Type | Annual |
Mature Size | 1-6 ft. tall, 1-3 ft. wide |
Sun Exposure | Full |
Soil Type | Well-draining soil |
Soil pH | 6.0–6.8 (Acidic) |
Bloom Time | Summer through fall |
Flower Color | Golden yellow, white, pink, magenta, orange, yellow, red, chocolate |
Hardiness Zones | 2–11 (USDA) |
Native Area | northern South America, Central America, and southern North America |
Cosmos Care
Cosmos grow easily in beds and make great cut flowers. When established, the plants can handle drought, poor soil conditions, and general neglect. They even self-sow. This is a truly low-maintenance plant.
While some pests, like aphids, flea beetles, and thrips feed on cosmos, they're easy to control with a strong spray of water or insecticidal soap. Aster yellows, bacterial wilt, and powdery mildew may also affect cosmos. Space plants accordingly to ensure good airflow to avoid diseases.
Taller varieties look good in the middle or rear of the border with goat's beard, coneflowers, and black-eyed Susans. Shorter varieties make very colorful, airy edging plants.
Warning
Cosmos sulphureus is invasive in the southeast United States. Check with representatives from your local extension office to learn about any restrictions in your area.
The Spruce / Letícia Almeida Tim Bird / Getty Images The Spruce / Letícia AlmeidaLight
For the best flowering, choose a site that gets full sun. Cosmos will grow in partial shade but will have fewer blooms and be less vigorous when planted in shady areas. These plants will also thrive under uninterrupted full sun in the hottest conditions, much like their native habitat: the arid regions of Mexico and Central America.
Soil
Cosmos plants prefer a neutral soil with a pH of 6.0 to 8.0, although they will grow in poor soil where many flowering plants languish. They perform best in medium moisture, well-drained soils, but they will perform adequately in dry soils. Avoid planting in a rich soil; it can cause the plants to get too tall and flop over. You can prevent drooping by staking the plants or growing them close to other plants that can support them.
Water
Once established, you will not need to water your cosmos plants unless there is a prolonged drought. Where water is limited, these are the last plants that require irrigation.
Temperature and Humidity
Hot weather is ideal for cosmos, and they thrive in any humidity level.
Fertilizer
Fertilizing can negatively impact cosmos. Cosmos can handle poor soil. Too much fertilizer can often lead to strong plants with lots of foliage but few blooms. Unless your plants seem to be struggling, these plants do not need fertilizer.
Types of Cosmos
There are over 25 species of cosmos. However, three species are most commonly used in gardens and landscaping. Cosmos sulphureus is native to Mexico, Central America, and northern South America. With golden yellow blooms, it is very drought tolerant and loves hot weather. The plant grows 2 to 6 feet tall and comes in double and semi-double flowers. Some of the more recent cultivars tend to be shorter, more orangy, and with smaller flowers.
Cosmos bipinnatus are colorful daisy-like flowers that come in white, pinks, reds, and orange. At 1 to 4 feet in height, they are shorter than C. suphureus and are available in several popular hybrid series. Although they are not quite as heat tolerant as C. sulphureus, C. bipinnatus will grow well in just about any sunny space.
Chocolate cosmos are a separate species: Cosmos atrosanguineus. The dark red flowers smell like chocolate. This perennial is hardy to USDA zone 7, but it is higher maintenance than annual cosmos. Like dahlias, it grows from tubers.
Other common cosmos cultivars include:
- 'Bright Lights' mix: This variety boasts a blend of exuberant yellows, oranges, and reds.
- 'Cosmic Orange': This brilliant, semi-double orange flower has great drought tolerance.
- 'Peppermint Candy': An award-winning variety, the petals are splashed in magenta and white.
- 'Sea Shells' series: A pretty mix of pastel colors, it has distinctive tubular petals.
- 'Ladybird': This cosmos is a shorter variety that blooms in red, yellow, orange, or gold, averaging 18 to 24 inches tall.
Pruning
The only real maintenance cosmos plants need is deadheading which will prolong the flowering season. If you fall behind, shear the plants by about one-third, when most flowers have faded. This kind of pruning produces a second flush of leaves and flowers. By the end of the season, you can cut off the plants at ground level or pull them up, roots and all. However, if you leave the plants in place, they may self-seed for the following growing season.
Propagating Cosmos
Cosmos plants readily self-seed. It's best to propagate these plants after the threat of frost is gone. Although sowing seeds is the best and easiest way to propagate this plant, you can also propagate via stem cutting. When you take stem trimmings, it stimulates more leaf and flower growth. Besides seed, stem cutting is the best way to propagate this plant. Here's how you do it:
- You'll need sterile pruning shears or scissors and a pot of sterile, well-draining potting soil.
- Fill a small 3-inch container with moistened potting soil. Using a pencil tip, push straight down in the soil about 1 to 2 inches deep, making a shallow hole.
- Look for a cosmos shoot that has 3 to 5 leaf nodes on the stem. Cut under the last leaf node. At the last leaf node, carefully cut off the leaves, leaving the node intact for new growth.
- Bury the cut tip of the stem in the pencil-made hole. Make sure that the last leaf node is above the soil line. Push down the soil around the stem, compacting the soil to keep the stem upright and in place.
- Water generously and keep moist. You should notice new leaf growth within three weeks. If you do, you can gently pull the root ball out of the container, Transplant the root ball to its new location.
How to Grow Cosmos From Seeds
Start seeds indoors, four to six weeks before the last frost. Or if you can sow cosmos outdoors directly in the garden well after the threat of frost is gone. Cosmos grow very quickly but can be killed by a late frost, so don't rush it. They typically germinate in 7 to 21 days at 75 degrees Fahrenheit, followed by flowering in about 50 to 60 days.
Loosen the soil to a depth of 8 inches. Plant the seeds and cover them with 1/4 inch of fine soil. Seed packets usually recommend precise spacing, such as at 2-foot intervals, or you can scatter the seeds and let the plants support each other as they grow. You can always thin them out later, moving the extra plants to another part of the garden.
Potting and Repotting Cosmos
When growing cosmos in pots, make sure the container has bottom drainage holes. Cosmos can't handle overly wet, soggy soil. Plan on growing one cosmos plant per gallon of your container. If growing in pots, do not enrich the soil, it makes the plants grow tall, leggy, and droopy. Also, tall varieties will need staking in containers. At the very least, plan on using at least a heavy, 12-inch diameter container.
Overwintering
Cosmos is an annual. If left outside in frosty temperatures, they will die. However, at the end of the growing season, if you allow the dead flower heads to drop their seeds, cosmos seeds will go dormant and sprout when the soil warms up again in the spring.
If you have a potted cosmos in a container and want to keep your cosmos alive over the winter season, you will need a bright full sun growing lamp for at least 7 hours a day. You will need to snip off any blooms as they form. This plant's life cycle ends with flowering when it drops its seeds for the next growing season.
How to Get Cosmos to Bloom
Cosmos plants need full sun to bloom. Even the hint of shade, can restrict flowering. Also, to encourage more blooms, you need to deadhead the old blooms. For faster blooms, prune between the main stem and a leaf. The lower you cut in the stem, the longer it takes to grow more flowers.
Common Problems With Cosmos
Cosmos are easy to grow and maintain over the growing season. They are usually resistant to disease, and most insects; however, some pests can become a nuisance and affect their growth.
Wilting or Leaf Discoloration
If your plant has ample water and is not wilting from a lack of hydration, there are two possible causes.
A plant that is wilting with leaf discoloration might have a common fusarium fungal infection. If you dig up the plant and notice a pink mass on the roots, then the plant likely has fusarium. The whole plant is beyond help, will die, and should be disposed of to stop the fungus spread.
If you dig up the roots and they look healthy, the plant may have a bacterial wilt infection. The bacteria cause the stems to wilt at their base. This plant will die and should be disposed of.
Yellowing Leaves and Leaf Drop
Powdery mildew mainly affects plants in the shade. Fungus spores fly through the air and attach to a host plant in a shady spot. It creates a powdery white coating on leaves and causes leaves to yellow and fall off. To prevent powdery mildew, provide your plants good circulation, bright light, and avoid getting water on the leaves. If your plant has fungus, use a horticultural fungicide according to the package instructions.
Flowers Distorting or Stunting in Growth
As a member of the aster family, cosmos can get aster yellows, a disease spread by leafhoppers (a tiny grasshopper-looking insect). The leaves will get yellow mottling on the leaves, and the flowers will appear distorted or stunted. Dispose of these plants since there is nothing you can do help them recover.
FAQ
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Cosmos are easy to care for, germinate, and will self-seed for the following growing season.
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Cosmos generally take 7 to 21 days to germinate and will flower within 50 to 60 days of germination.
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Cosmos is an annual that germinates, flowers, and drops seed in preparation for the following growing season. Cosmos will languish and eventually die after flowering.
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C. bipinnatus are bushy plants that grow to an average height of about 1 to 4 feet. The flowers come in red, pink, and white. The leaves are spaced apart along the stem and cut into thread-like segments. The outer rays of the flowers surround the yellow-colored, clustered central disc of florets. Meanwhile, C.sulphureus can grow to a height of 2 to 6 feet. The flowers come in shades of orange, yellow, and red. It has hairy stems, and the daisy-like flowers have yellow rays and discs.
Article Sources
The Spruce uses only high-quality sources, including peer-reviewed studies, to support the facts within our articles. Read our editorial process to learn more about how we fact-check and keep our content accurate, reliable, and trustworthy.
Cosmos sulphureus Cav.sulphur cosmos. United States Department of Agriculture.
Cosmos (Cosmos). Connecticut State Agricultural Experiment Station.
Cosmos bipinnatus. Missouri Botanical Garden.
Fusarium Wilts. Royal Horticulture Society.
Diseases of Cosmos. National Gardening Association.
Powdery Mildew. University of California Integrated Pest Management.
Cosmos: Aster Yellows. University of Minnesota Extension.
expert tips on when and where to plant |
(Image credit: Unsplash Mathew Schwartz)
Garden favorites for summer color, learn how to grow cosmos and you can enjoy clouds of these daisy-like flowers dancing in the breeze and filling garden beds and borders.
Ranging from pale pastels and whites through to bright pinks, crimson, orange and other zingy colors, these annuals are enduring favorites for flower bed ideas. They will happily self seed for several years, filling your yards with their open-faced blooms that can go on for months and months, adding to your palette of late summer flowers and still displaying their cheery blooms until the first frosts of fall.
Cosmos comes from the Greek ‘kosmos’, meaning beautiful, and growing tall with their fine, feathery deciduous foliage, cosmos are definitely one to include if you're planning a cut flower garden as the more flowers you pick, the more you'll get.
There are many cultivars available, including doubles, others with tubular rays and some bi-colors, in different tall and compact varieties.
Once you know how to grow cosmos you'll be using them to brighten up all corners of your garden.
How to grow cosmos from seed
(Image credit: Getty Images)
It is easy to get to grips with how to grow cosmos from seed and they can be sown any time throughout spring depending on the hardiness zone where you live. The seeds are large, long and thin, so easy to handle and germinate quickly.
'Cosmos are the very best, low-maintenance and floweriest plants in the world. With little effort, they give you buckets of cut flowers and they have a good vase life, too. Easy to grow, long-flowering and brilliant for picking, it’s hard to fault them,' says expert plantswoman, Sarah Raven .
These pollen-rich flowers are also an excellent lure for bees and other pollinators to attract them into a wildlife garden. 'They are stacked with nectar and pollen, so bees and butterflies love them,' agrees Sarah. too.
Cosmos bipinnatus, the most commonly grown, also known as Mexican aster, originates from the Americas.
When it comes to growing cosmos from seed you have two options. You can grow them in modules or seed trays indoors, or plant them directly out in the garden. There are benefits to both.
(Image credit: Future/Leigh Clapp)
How do you successfully grow cosmos?
Growing cosmos in modules or seed trays indoors to start them off, gives you more control over the blooms. Keeping them off the ground and under cover will also protect the delicate seedlings from slugs and harsh weather. Plus, since you are starting your plants off indoors, you are able to start planting earlier – in early spring – so will have well established flowers that attract bees by early summer.
Sow indoors in module or seed trays, covered with about 2mm of good, fresh compost. Water from below, allow excess water to drain away and position in a warm place, ideally 60 to 70 0°F (16 to 21°C), to germinate, which takes around 30 days.
Move seedlings to a cold frame or light, sheltered spot for a few weeks before planting out to harden them off. This will result in 'much faster growing and longer-lasting flowers,' says gardening guru Monty Don on his blog . He also recommends doing the same for young cosmos that are bought in the garden center, too.
Direct sowing cosmos outdoors
(Image credit: Leigh Clapp)
If you choose to direct sow cosmos outdoors, this is a low-maintenance choice that is beautiful for a cottage garden idea. 'I place them in groups so they make drifts and clumps rather than straight lines,' says Monty.
For how to grow cosmos seeds outdoors, wait until the soil has warmed up, then:
- Rake your seedbed area to remove any clumps of soil and achieve a crumbly texture;
- Cosmos don’t need any special soil preparation – in fact, a too rich soil will encourage foliage rather than flowers;
- Sow seeds lightly, spaced about 2-3in (5-8 cm) apart;
- Thin out seedlings;
- Water until established but don’t over water as that can lead to less flowers.
(Image credit: Getty Images)
Where do cosmos grow best?
Cosmos grow best in a sunny spot, protected from wind, with well-drained, light soil. It is advisable to mulch the ground to conserve moisture, and if you learn how to make leaf mulch you can use your own organic garden material.
If you live in a very warm zone that can suffer extreme heat, cosmos will tolerate part shade.
Cosmos tolerate most pH levels, but do best in neutral to alkaline soils and are quite drought tolerant, so might be worth adding to your planting palette if you're planning a dry garden. Long periods or wet and cold are detrimental and can delay flowering.
Plant your cosmos in a group to make a real focal point statement for late summer into fall until the first frost. This will also attract more bees than if they are dotted through the garden.
Cosmos are useful for cheery color in any area of a backyard and suit a range of styles – from planting a cottage garden border, creating a prairie style naturalistic planting design, or planting a wildflower meadow.
‘I love to grow lots of different varieties of cosmos, putting together different heights and colors in pots and for borders for wonderful layers of intense colour,’ says Sarah Raven.
They are also excellent for companion planting alongside vegetable and fruit crops in a kitchen garden, as they entice pest predators and valuable pollinators. 'We plant cosmos with our vegetables, in rows to help support each other,' explain Henrietta Courtauld and Bridget Elworthy, the Land Gardeners .
When to plant cosmos seeds
(Image credit: Leigh Clapp)
Early spring is the best time to sow cosmos seeds under cover indoors, which will then produce flowers that bloom earlier in summer.
Alternatively you can direct sow cosmos seeds in their flowering position once the soil has warmed up. This will differ depending on the area where you live, but will be from about late May in cooler regions, and earlier in warmer zones.
Bought seedlings can be planted in late May or June.
Is cosmos easy to grow?
Yes cosmos are easy to grow. 'Cosmos is one of the easiest flowers to grow from seed that is directly sown in the garden bed,' advise the experts at American Meadows .
‘As they grow, stake cosmos if necessary, and water them regularly,' says Sarah Raven.
Cosmos suffer from few pest problems. Watch out for slugs and snails, though, especially when the plants are young and tender, so use slug barriers. To avoid powdery mildew and fungal diseases ensure your plants have space and the soil isn’t soggy. 'Cosmos prefer dry, arid soil over wet conditions. Soil that is too moist may lead to disease,' advise the American Meadows experts.
(Image credit: sarahraven. com / Jonathan Buckley)
Can you put cosmos in pots?
Cosmos, particularly the shorter varieties, can be grown in pots, and make attractive patio and container plants. As they are good at attracting beneficial insects to veg and fruit crops, why not include them in your vegetable garden container ideas?
Try a mix of shorter dwarf cosmos varieties, such as the Sensation and Sonata mixes, grown from seed, or buy as seedlings and plant out from May, spaced about 11in (30cm) apart. Cosmos work particularly well in pots with zinnias.
Use a light potting mix, in pots with good drainage and place in a sunny spot. Water regularly and feed with a liquid fertilizer every few weeks during summer.
(Image credit: Leigh Clapp)
How to keep cosmos flowering
If your cosmos aren't flowering, you could be making one crucial mistake. An important step in how to grow cosmos and keep them flowering is to deadhead the blooms. This stops the plant putting its energy into creating seeds and instead puts its efforts into creating more flowers.
Chances are you will be busy in the garden deadheading roses and petunias, and other blooms, so add cosmos to the list.
'As long as you don’t cut the plants right to the ground, but above a pair of leaves, more buds will form to fill next week’s vases and more for the week after that. The lower you go in the plant, the more delay between the flower you've just picked and the next flower,' explains Sarah Raven.
'We love cosmos because it is light and airy and has the joy of endless giving – every time you deadhead another flower appears,' add the Land Gardeners.
(Image credit: Thompson & Morgan)
Do cosmos come back every year?
Nearly all cosmos are annuals meaning they do not come back every year. In order to have blooms every year, you will need to resow the seeds the following spring.
The only exception to this rule is chocolate cosmos, cosmos atrosanguineus, which is grown like a dahlia from a tuber and is a perennial. Chocolate cosmos is loved for its delicious vanillary-chocolate scent and velvety brown flowers, and since it is a perennial, will come back year after year.
Annual cosmos can also self seed. If you let some of your cosmos flowers die naturally and fall to the ground they will germinate seeds by themselves. Allowing plants to self seed is a step on the way to creating an eco-friendly garden.
You may also like to try collecting seeds to save from the flowers to sow next spring. If you want to save seeds be aware that hybrids will not grow true-to-type, so select varieties that have been open pollinated, as opposed to hybrids – which can vary widely in the next generation.
You can collect cosmos seeds at the same time as you are collecting zinnia seeds and those of other flowers that you love. This is a cost-effective way to populate your garden with flowers, year on year.
Scatter the collected seeds in your garden or save in labelled envelopes or paper bags for sowing the next year.
(Image credit: Leigh Clapp)
Do you pinch cosmos?
You should pinch out the growing tips of cosmos to encourage branching and flowering, and in around 12 weeks you should see your first blooms.
If you then want to enjoy those flowers in the house as well as in the garden, cosmos make excellent cut flowers. To harvest for cut flowers, cut the cosmos blooms when they are beginning to unfurl in the morning, as this is when there will be the most moisture making them less likely to wilt.
Plunge the blooms into a bucket of warm water, stripping off lower leaves to avoid them in the water. There are many tricks for how to keep flowers fresh in a vase. Re-cut the stems regularly and refresh the water and cosmos should last up to 10 days in the vase.
(Image credit: Pippa Blenkinsop)
Do cosmos need staking?
The taller varieties of cosmos will need staking to prevent them flopping over.
They can grow up to 8 feet (2.5m) and flowers can reach 3 inches (8cm) across.
‘It’s worth taking the time to stake them properly as they benefit greatly from growing straight early on. If they collapse, they’ll never grow or flower as well as when vertically supported,’ explains Sarah Raven.
How often should I water cosmos?
Water cosmos regularly until they are established, or during dry spells. It is important, however, that you do not over-water cosmos as this can result in plants with fewer flowers.
Cosmos can tolerate dry soil, even in a hot, sunbaked spot. In fact, they prefer poor soil and seem to thrive on a bit of neglect!
(Image credit: Leigh Clapp)
Do cosmos like sun or shade?
Cosmos are sun loving flowers, although they will tolerate a little shade in warmer climates.
Cosmos and zinnias are good companions and mix them also with other sun-loving plants in borders, beds, meadow planting and containers, such as Verbena bonariensis, alstroemeria, calendula, eryngium, dahlias and nepeta.
'Cosmos can be combined with almost all full sun border plants to give that "wow" factor mid to late season. Infilled in a shrub border or alongside flowering plants, such as monarda, salvias and gaura works well,' says garden designer Charlie Bloom.
The range of colors allows for diverse combinations, whether bright and breezy or more subtle, so there’s lots of scope.
Leigh Clapp is a professional photographer with over 25 years experience, primarily as a garden specialist photojournalist but also with food and travel. She delights in exploring gardens, discovering the tiny elements to their overall essence and meeting lots of enthusiastic gardeners along the way. Leigh’s work appears in magazines, newspapers and books, both in the UK and abroad, including Period Living, Country Life, and Gardens Illustrated; as well as being sole photographer for a number of books, including Garden Details, Feng Shui in the Garden, Vertical Gardens and From the Garden – fresh seasonal cooking.
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