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SUS Farms — Allegedly Organic

cool season · Brassicaceae

Growing Wallflower (Bowles Mauve) in Utah

Tender perennial — blooms spring to fall in mild winters. Sweet fragrance. Cottage-garden classic.

Schedule (May 15 last frost)

When to do what

Start indoors

3/6

Transplant out

4/24

First harvest

7/31

Dates are calibrated for SUS Farms (Sevier County, Zone 6a, last frost May 15). For your own date, use the interactive calendar.

Planting

How deep, how far apart

0"1"2"3"4"5"6"0.125" deep12" apart

Method

Start indoors

Seed depth

0.125″

Plant spacing

12″

Row spacing

18″

Germination temp

55–70°F

Days to maturity

100 days

How we grow it

Step-by-step

  1. 1.

    Start indoors 10 weeks before last frost

    Seed-starting mix in 2" or 4" cells. Bottom heat at 5570°F until germination, then drop to room temperature. Light from a clip lamp 14–16 hours a day, 2" from the leaves.

  2. 2.

    Harden off for 7 days before going outside

    Day 1: 1 hour outside in shade. Add an hour and more sun each day. Skip the day if it’s windy or below 50°F. After day 7 the plants stay outside.

  3. 3.

    Transplant 12″ apart in rows 18″ apart

    Soil should be at least 55°F before transplanting — black plastic mulch laid down two weeks ahead helps in our cool springs. Water in deeply.

  4. 4.

    Mulch and water consistently

    2" of straw or wood chip mulch around the base. Drip line at the surface. Aim for 1" per week — including rain — measured at soil level, not by the calendar.

  5. 5.

    Harvest around day 100

    Days-to-maturity is a rough guide — taste, color, and size are the real signals. Tender perennial — blooms spring to fall in mild winters. Sweet fragrance. Cottage-garden classic.

From the farm

What we’ve learned growing wallflower (bowles mauve)

Wallflower (Bowles Mauve) earns its space in the garden because pollinators don't care about your tomato yield unless something invites them in. Plus, wallflower (bowles mauve) pairs surprisingly well with vegetable beds — interplanted strategically, it acts as a trap crop, a pollinator beacon, or just a reason to walk the rows in July when the work is most relentless.

Pests & problems

Brassicaceae family pressures in Utah

Wallflower (Bowles Mauve) shares its troubles with broccoli, cabbage, kale, radish, turnip, arugula. The pests and diseases below show up most years; the fixes are what we actually do, not what catalogs sell.

Scout weekly during the growing season — most outbreaks are 10x easier to manage when you catch them in week one.

Pest 1

Cabbage looper / imported cabbageworm — green caterpillars that lace-up brassica leaves. White butterflies are the adults; if you see them, eggs are coming. Bt spray is highly effective.

Pest 2

Flea beetles — tiny black beetles that pinprick leaves. Most damaging on young transplants. Floating row cover for the first 30 days of life.

Pest 3

Cabbage maggot — fly lays eggs at the base of stems. Brassica collars (cardboard rings around stems) prevent egg-laying.

Disease 1

Clubroot — gnarled, swollen roots; plant wilts. Soil-borne, persists 7+ years. Lime the soil to pH 7.0+ if confirmed; rotate Brassicas out for 7 years.

Disease 2

Black rot — yellow V-shaped lesions on leaf margins. Bacterial; spreads in wet conditions. Rotate, water at base, sterilize tools.

Companion planting

What to plant near (and away from) wallflower (bowles mauve)

Most companion-planting charts you see online are folklore. The pairings below have either USU Extension research, Cornell vegetable MD pages, or our own multi-year farm logs behind them.

Plant near

Good companions

  • Onions, garlic, chives (mask brassica scent from cabbage moths)
  • Dill (attracts beneficial wasps)
  • Sage (cabbage moth deterrent)
  • Beets (mineral exchange)

Plant away from

Bad companions

  • Strawberries (share fungal diseases)
  • Other brassicas in same bed sequentially (rotation rules)

Crop rotation

Brassicas in year 2 of a 4-year rotation. Best after legumes. Worst after other brassicas — disease carryover is severe.

Harvest & storage

Picking, keeping, preserving

Cut flowers

Cut in early morning when stems are turgid. Strip lower leaves, plunge into clean water immediately. Recut stems at a 45° angle once inside, ideally underwater. Change vase water every 2-3 days for longest vase life.

Drying

Hang small bundles upside down in a dark, dry, ventilated space. 2-3 weeks. Best for everlasting flowers (statice, strawflower) and seed heads. Most fresh-cut flowers don't dry well — they crumple instead of preserving form.

Mistakes we’ve made

Common ways to fail at wallflower (bowles mauve)

Each of these has cost us a season at some point. Easier to learn from someone else’s lost crop than your own.

1.

Planting too deep

The fix:Wallflower (Bowles Mauve) seeds want exactly 0.125" of cover — about barely covered with a sprinkle of fine soil. Deeper than that and the seedling exhausts itself before reaching light. Carrots and lettuce especially: shallow is right; sprinkle, then cover with a dusting of soil and tamp gently.

2.

Skipping the harden-off step

The fix:Plants raised under indoor lights have soft cuticles and weak stems. Move them straight outside and they sunburn, snap in wind, or wilt and never recover. The 7-day gradual sun exposure is mandatory, not optional.

3.

Watering on a calendar instead of by need

The fix:Stick a finger or screwdriver 4" into the bed. Damp at depth = wait. Dry at depth = water deeply. Calendar watering ignores rain, heat waves, and seasonal evapotranspiration — leading to either drought stress or root rot.

4.

Ignoring soil pH

The fix:Most Utah backyard soil tests at pH 7.4-8.4 (alkaline). Iron and zinc become unavailable to roots above pH 7.5 — leaves yellow, growth stalls. A $20 mailer test from USU Extension tells you exactly what your soil needs. Sulfur amendment in fall, foliar iron mid-season as needed.

5.

Letting heat-bolt happen mid-season

The fix:Cool-season crops bolt (go to seed, become bitter) when night temps stay above 70°F. Plant for an early-spring AND late-summer harvest, with a heat gap in between. Fall plantings of lettuce, spinach, and brassicas are often better than spring ones in Utah.

Common questions

Frequently asked about wallflower (bowles mauve)

+When should I start wallflower (bowles mauve) indoors in Utah?

In Sevier County (last frost May 15), start 10 weeks before — that's roughly March. If you're at higher elevation (Park City, Logan), add 2 weeks. Lower elevation (Salt Lake, St. George), subtract 2-4 weeks. Use the interactive seed-starting calendar at /seeds/calendar to dial it in for your specific frost date.

+Why are my wallflower (bowles mauve) leaves turning yellow?

Three usual suspects. (1) Iron chlorosis — yellow leaves with green veins is the Utah classic; the cause is alkaline soil locking up iron. Foliar iron rescues the season; sulfur amendment in fall fixes it long-term. (2) Nitrogen deficiency — entire leaf yellow including veins, starts with old leaves. Side-dress with compost or a slow-release organic fertilizer. (3) Overwatering — yellowing accompanied by soft, mushy stems means the roots are drowning. Check drainage; reduce water frequency.

+Will wallflower (bowles mauve) survive a late frost in Utah?

Wallflower (Bowles Mauve) is a cool-season crop and tolerates light frost (down to ~28°F) once established. Tender seedlings just out of the greenhouse are more vulnerable — cover with floating row cover when overnight forecasts show below 35°F. After hardening off properly, mature plants of this family typically shrug off late-spring frosts that would kill warm-season crops.

+How long does wallflower (bowles mauve) take from seed to harvest?

100 days from transplant. Add 70 days for the indoor seed-starting phase, so total time from sowing seed to first harvest is roughly 170 days. Days-to-maturity is a baseline — cool springs add a week or two; hot summers can speed up by similar amounts. Use it for planning, not as a strict calendar.

+What's the spacing between wallflower (bowles mauve) plants?

12" between plants in the row, 18" between rows. That gives mature plants room to fill in without competing. Closer spacing reduces yield per plant; wider spacing wastes garden space. The numbers come from average mature plant size at full vegetative growth — adjust slightly for compact varieties (closer) or large heirlooms (wider).

Sources:Johnny’s Selected Seeds·USU Extension·Cross-checked with our greenhouse logs.