20000+ Magic Blue Creeping Thyme Seeds for Planting Ground Cover Plants Heirloom Flowers Perennial Thyme Non-GMO Thymus Serpyllum Seed
$8.95 Original price was: $8.95.$7.95Current price is: $7.95.





Planting Requirements:
1. Lighting conditions:Light
2.Days to Germinate: Sprouts in 21-30 Days
3.Soil temperature: 70 degrees MAX F
4.Seed Depth: 1/8″
5.Plant type: Perennial
Growing Tips:
These seeds are very tiny so it’s best to use the shaker method and mix your seeds with sand to spread, or mix your packet with 4 cups of peat and spread in your garden area.
Creeping Thyme Thymus Serpyllum is a robust, hardy perennial subshrub native to Europe and North Africa. Creeping Thyme seeds can be started indoors 6-8 weeks before last frost or directly outdoors in spring.
These seeds are very tiny so it’s best to use the shaker method and mix your seeds with sand to spread, or mix your packet with 4 cups of peat and spread in your garden area. Thyme likes moist soil while germinating so don’t let your soil dry out (water from below and cover pots with plastic wrap). These germinate very slowly and the difficult part is keeping them cool, moist, and exposed to light (during the day) for 30 days.
Or keep your pot/tray (with holes in the bottom) in a tray containing about 1″ of water and cover lightly with plastic wrap. Keep your pot/tray under lights until germination. Thyme need a cool and moist environment to germinate.
Plant type: Perennial.Germination lighting: Light.Germination days:21-30 days.Maturation days:60 days.
Made in USA – It makes excellent for moms, adults and gardening box for men. Share with your family and friends its happiness from germination to flowering and fruiting.If the package is damaged, in insufficient quantity, or can not germinate, please contact us to replace it for you.
7 reviews for 20000+ Magic Blue Creeping Thyme Seeds for Planting Ground Cover Plants Heirloom Flowers Perennial Thyme Non-GMO Thymus Serpyllum Seed


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Chickenlady33 –
THIS IS NOT ANY VARIETY OF THYME IDK what it is.
THIS IS NOT ANY VARIETY OF THYME. First pic is what grew from these seeds. 2nd pic is actual real newly started thyme. I’ve been growing herbs for yrs and have several established thyme patches. I wanted to use it as a border around my rock gardens and wated to buy bulk seeds. I Started these in egg cartons and sprouted over 50 in egg cartons. Transplanted once they sprouted. But what grew wasn’t thyme. Idk what it is. It is not any variety of thyme though. It’s growing tall and the leaves are round. Thyme plants have tiny elongated leaves and don’t grow upright they kind of fall over on the ground. They also smell wonderful which is why I wanted thyme. This plant has zero herbal smell. So I essentially wasted weeks of my time and effort to plant some random mystery plant around my rock gardens. Now I have to start over with actual thyme seeds. Buying several packets of actual thyme seeds at a grocery store would have cost me the same amt and I would actually have thyme plants.
TL –
I was worried about nothing, so many plants I still need to transplant
I’m not a gardener and have a hard time growing anything from seed. I had a yard full of cheat grass and weeds, that I’m trying to bring back to life with clover and drought-resistant plants.I thought there was no way I’d be successful since the growing process looked so finicky, but figured I’d give it a try with about half the seeds.I waited until after the last expected frost (April 8), used a bunch of little tiny pots, some potting soil, peat moss, and trays to keep everything wet. I put it all in a little red wagon in the front yard where it could get lots of sun and covered it with some thick plastic sheeting. The temperature did get into frost level a couple nights, but the plastic sheet was enough to protect my germinating seeds.For the actual planting, I filled the little pots with potting soil, putting a little peat moss on top. I put the seeds on a 4″ plastic lid, dampened my finger tip a little, then picked some up and sprinkled them into the pots. Once I got all the seeds in the pots, I brushed the tops with my finger tip to work them in just a little bit.April 20, I saw my first sprouts, and as the temperatures increased, I started to remove the plastic cover during the day. Got my first flower June 26, and within a few days started to see a lot more flowers.I thought I drowned them one day after running the sprinkler (I thought the old wagon had some rust holes for drainage, it didn’t, and they were covered in water overnight), but they did well afterward. I immediately put one small pot worth of plants in the ground without separating them, just in case (that would be the big bunch in the photo). The others stayed in pots until I was in a better position for transplanting (some are still waiting, there were a lot!)I’ve transplanted a couple of the small pots into over 20 different locations, all but that first one with just two or three plants each. So far all are thriving and flowering, except two that didn’t make it. I’ll get the rest transplanted soon, and will try to grow the rest of the seeds when it starts to cool down in the fall (or wait until spring again).The camera makes them look really purple, but some are more blue than others. Looking forward to them really taking off after a year or two. Even though the germination period seemed like it would be super finicky, they thrived even with my less-than-ideal conditions. I’m glad I took the chance on them!
Karl –
The Reveiws of These Seeds Tell It All
I should have read the reveiws . To start : in the descrption there is nothing about how much ground cover a pack covers. So i researched and one person says 1 ounce should cover 100 square feet. I needed to cover 500 square feet. The pack is adverstised to have a llittle over an ounce in it. In mine , each pack had a different amout and not 1 had the eqivilence of 1 teaspoon. I bought 5 packs that were the equvilent of 3 teaspoons all together . So thats abour $45.00 for 3 teaspoons of seed. Imgaine 3 teaspoon covering 500 square feet. Then they came with no instructions on how to plant them . So I had to figure out how I could get 3 teaspoons to cover 500 square feet. So I filled a bowl full of soil and mixed the seeds through out it and and flung it out over my space. I can’t imagine the 3 teaspoons I put out there covering 500 square foot at all. I’ll have to wait and see,. Because I am 99% not confident I will try to find these with someone else and since the seeds are so small my plan is to buy 6 ounces again and fill up a powde shaker and shake it empty in hopes of covering my space . I can’t even give tit 1 star. I shoud have read the reviews.
Kindle Customer –
Looks like a carpet
Came up in one week.im happy with it
Dianna Williams –
I don’t know if I got the right product or not went 2 ft tall
All right so the seeds I got were super tiny and they did come up this year. But the problem is they grow over 2 ft tall. I don’t see how this is creeping and the leaves on the plant I believe her 2 in long. Long and skinny so I don’t see how this is creeping when it’s a very tall plant and I finally mowed it because I was going to sell the house, it was sticking up two feet in the air in the front yard so it looked terrible in the front pattern box I mowed it down and it’s literally got a stock on it like a small tree, I mean half the size of a pencil and it snaps like a twig I don’t understand
NC review –
Donât give up on germination
I almost didnât buy these because some reviews said the seeds didnât germinate but the plants look so pretty, I had to try. I purchased pink, blue, and purple and got ALL of them to germinate! I covered shallow long box tops with aluminum foil, then filled them with sphagnum moss. THE SEEDS ARE SUPER TINYâ almost like dust. I made two long, shallow rows with my finger and sprinkled seeds along each row, and then dusted a small amount of the moss on them. I sprayed each box till the moss was soaked, then covered each box with plastic wrap (for a mini greenhouse effect) and placed them on my porch where they would get morning sunlight. Spring has started here so no night got below 50 degrees. I made sure the moss stayed damp, adding sprays of water when needed.At seven daysânothing. At ten days, a couple of the boxes had bright green sprouts that were so tiny I wasnât sure they were sprouts. By twelve days there were LOTS of them in each box. I have removed the plastic from all boxes and SO FAR SO GOOD. Will update this when/if they actually are transplantable and grow!
Ronald E. Rollans –
Flowers are the beauty of the soul
I absolutely love these flowers. The germination rate is great.