How to plant grow and care for Petunias
When to plant petunias
It is easiest to buy young plants from a nursery that sells petunias in apartments. Look for plants that are short and compact. Leggy petunias with lots of flowers already won’t settle as quickly.
If you want to grow petunias from seed, start the seeds indoors 8 to 10 weeks before your last spring frost date. (See your local frost dates.)
Plant young petunias outdoors after your last spring frost date, but keep a close eye on the weather forecast and protect young plants from late frosts.
Petunia seeds are very small (dust-like!) and need a lot of light to germinate.
When the young plants have three leaves, plant them outside.
Space the plants about 1 foot apart.
If planting petunias in containers, use a potting mix that will drain well.
Hanging basket with petunia flowers
GROWING
Petunias are quite heat tolerant, so you shouldn’t have to worry about watering them often. A thorough watering once a week should be sufficient (unless there are long periods of drought in your area). Avoid shallow watering, as this encourages shallow roots.
Fertilize petunias monthly with a balanced fertilizer to support their rapid growth and vigorous flowering. Double-flowered varieties enjoy a dose of fertilizer every two weeks.
What to do with leggy petunias
After pruning, fertilize and water the plants well to force out new growth and flowers. The plants may look ragged at first but they will come back with more color and flowers.
Remove faded, old, or dead flowers (a practice called “deadheading”) to improve both blooms and attractiveness, especially for petunias with larger flowers. Deadheading prevents seed pods from competing with flowers for the plant’s food supply. Clippings can be added to a compost pile to be recycled.