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Zinnia Meteor

$4.95

Zinnia Elegans

  • Seed Count 200
  • Large Double Flowers
  • Annual
  • Height 80 cm

In stock

Description

Zinnia Meteor with its deeply saturated red blooms and tall, sturdy presence, it’s the kind of flower that stops people in their tracks. Whether you’re building a cutting garden, filling out summer borders, or just craving a fuss-free splash of colour, this old-fashioned favourite has all the charm and performance you could ask for.

Zinnia Meteor is a large dahlia-flowered variety with a strong and statuesque growth habit. Its double blooms measure a generous 10 to 12 centimeters across and are packed tightly with velvety petals that form a full, rounded pompom shape. The rich red colouring is luxurious and right at the centre, a subtle greenish-yellow eye peeks through, giving the bloom a little lift and sparkle.

Each flower is borne on a long, strong stem that holds itself upright without flopping or bending under the weight of the bloom. You can expect blooms right through the warmer months, too. With a little attention to deadheading these plants will reward you with flush after flush of fresh colour from mid-summer right into autumn.

Zinnia ‘Meteor’ represents the best of that evolution. It combines old-school resilience with a new level of beauty. In fact, the popularity of this variety speaks to a wider revival of interest in Zinnias altogether. For a time, they fell out of fashion—overshadowed by more ‘modern’ blooms or forgotten in the trend toward wildflower meadows and naturalistic planting. But now, they’re back—and they’re making a statement. Gardeners are rediscovering their value, not just for their looks but for how incredibly easy and reliable they are.

Zinnias are especially beloved in the cutting garden. They grow quickly, bloom heavily, and have that magic combination of bright colour and long vase life. Even a small planting can supply a season’s worth of fresh flowers for the house. And unlike some cut flowers that need kid gloves and perfect conditions, Zinnias are sturdy little workhorses. They’ll keep flowering right through the season, especially if given a bit of encouragement with regular picking or deadheading.

The bold, open blooms are a magnet for pollinators. Bees, butterflies, and other beneficial insects flock to them, making them a wonderful addition to any mixed bed or vegetable patch where insect activity is encouraged. For gardeners who are trying to create a more balanced, buzzing, biodiverse backyard, these blooms are a real asset.

It’s also worth mentioning that Zinnia Meteor is forgiving when it comes to soil. While it will thrive best in a well-drained, sunny position—as most annuals prefer—it’s also tolerant of average soils and less-than-perfect conditions. That makes it a wonderful flower for beginner gardeners, or for those working with difficult spots where other plants might struggle.

From a design perspective, it’s rich red colour is incredibly useful. It pairs well with warm tones like gold, orange, and red, but also offers a gorgeous contrast to softer hues like blush pink, pale yellow, or even blue. In arrangements, it adds drama and contrast. In the garden, it brings depth and weight, helping to anchor brighter, lighter blooms nearby.

All in all, Zinnia Meteor is the kind of flower that earns its place season after season. It’s beautiful without being fussy, reliable without being boring, and generous in a way that only truly good garden plants are. Whether you’re planting for cut flowers, garden colour, or pollinator support, this is one variety that will deliver—and then some.

Find your Climate Zone

Method: Sow direct
Soil Temp: 20°C - 30°C
Cool Mountain: Sep - Nov
Position: Full sun
Arid: Sep - Nov
Row Spacing: 30cm apart
Temperate: Jul - Feb
Planting Depth: 3mm
Sub Tropical: May to Oct
Harvest: 350 days
Tropical: May
Plant Height: 80 cm

🌸 Zinnia Grow Guide

🌱 Overview

Zinnia is a bright, cheerful flowering plant grown for its bold colours, long flowering period, strong stems, and excellent value in pollinator gardens. Flowers may be single, semi-double, or fully double, with colours including red, orange, yellow, pink, purple, white, cream, lime, coral, and mixed shades. It is a favourite for cottage gardens, cut flower beds, borders, pots, vegetable garden edges, and beneficial insect plantings.

Zinnias are fast-growing and rewarding from seed. They are especially useful for gardeners who want quick colour and plenty of flowers for picking. Bees, butterflies, hoverflies, and other beneficial insects are strongly attracted to the blooms, making zinnias both beautiful and practical.

The key to growing strong zinnias is sun, warmth, airflow, well-drained soil, and avoiding overhead watering. They dislike sitting in cold wet soil and can develop mildew if crowded or watered over the leaves too often.

🌾 Sowing in Trays Versus Direct Sowing

Zinnias can be grown by direct sowing or by sowing in trays, and both methods work well. However, direct sowing is often the best method where the garden bed is ready and pest pressure is manageable. Zinnias grow quickly from large, easy-to-handle seed, and they establish strongly when sown where they are to flower.

To direct sow, prepare a loose, weed-free garden bed with fine soil. Sow the seed about 5 to 10 mm deep, cover lightly, and water gently. Keep the soil evenly moist until seedlings appear. Once seedlings are large enough to handle, thin them so each plant has enough room to branch and allow airflow.

Tray sowing is useful if you need to protect seedlings from slugs, snails, birds, ants, heavy rain, or poor garden conditions. Use individual cells or small pots rather than a crowded punnet, as zinnias do not like root disturbance once they are growing strongly. Sow one seed per cell, cover lightly, and transplant while seedlings are still young and compact.

Best method: direct sowing is recommended for zinnias because they germinate readily, grow quickly, and establish best with minimal root disturbance. Tray sowing is a good option when seedlings need protection before planting out.

💧 Seed Pretreatment

Zinnia seed does not require pretreatment. No soaking, chilling, scarifying, or smoke treatment is needed. Fresh seed, shallow sowing, steady moisture, and bright conditions are enough for reliable germination.

Soaking is usually unnecessary and can make the seed more prone to rotting if the soil is too wet. The most common reasons for poor germination are old seed, soil that is too wet, seed buried too deeply, or seedlings being eaten soon after emergence.

🪴 Soil and Position

Zinnias grow best in full sun. A bright, open position encourages strong stems, rich flower colour, and heavy blooming. Plants grown in too much shade often become stretched, weak, and more prone to mildew.

The soil should be well drained and moderately fertile. Zinnias appreciate compost-enriched soil, but they do not need overly rich feeding. Too much nitrogen can create lush leafy growth with fewer flowers. A light loam, sandy loam, raised bed, or improved garden soil is ideal.

If the soil is heavy clay, improve drainage before sowing or planting. Raised beds and mounds can help prevent wet roots. For pots, use a quality potting mix and choose a container with good drainage holes. Dwarf zinnias are best for pots, while taller cutting types need more root room and may need support.

Good airflow is very important. Avoid squeezing zinnias into cramped spaces, as crowded plants are more likely to develop powdery mildew and leaf spotting.

🌿 Care and Maintenance

Zinnias are easy to care for once established, but they perform best with regular attention. Water young seedlings consistently until they are growing strongly. Once established, water deeply at the base rather than sprinkling the leaves. Wet foliage can encourage fungal disease, especially in dense plantings.

Mulch around plants with straw, sugarcane mulch, composted leaves, or fine bark. Mulch helps conserve soil moisture, reduce weeds, and prevent soil splashing onto leaves. Keep mulch slightly away from the stems so the base does not stay too wet.

Feed lightly. A small amount of compost before planting is often enough in good soil. If plants are in pots or flowering heavily, use a mild liquid flower fertiliser occasionally. Avoid heavy nitrogen feeding, as this can reduce flowering and create soft growth.

Pinch young zinnia plants when they have several sets of leaves to encourage bushier growth and more flowering stems. This is especially useful for cut flower production. If you want one tall central flower, do not pinch, but for more blooms, pinching is usually worthwhile.

Deadhead regularly to keep plants flowering. Removing spent blooms tells the plant to keep producing new flowers. If you are saving seed, leave some of the best flowers to mature fully on the plant.

Tall varieties may need staking or support, especially in windy positions. Use stakes, mesh, twine, or a flower support frame before plants become heavy with blooms.

🌼 Companion Planting Guide

Zinnias are excellent companion flowers because they attract pollinators and beneficial insects. They are especially useful near fruiting vegetables, herbs, and edible garden beds where insect activity improves productivity.

Good companions include tomatoes, capsicum, eggplant, cucumber, zucchini, pumpkin, beans, peas, lettuce, kale, basil, parsley, dill, coriander, chives, calendula, alyssum, marigold, nasturtium, cosmos, cornflower, salvia, and sunflowers.

Zinnias pair beautifully with other bright flowers and herbs. They make strong colour combinations with calendula, marigold, cosmos, alyssum, and nasturtium. In vegetable gardens, they can be planted along bed edges to attract bees and butterflies without crowding crops.

Avoid planting zinnias too close to moisture-loving plants that need constant overhead watering. Also avoid placing them where dense vines or tall crops will shade and smother them. Good sun and airflow are essential for healthy zinnia plants.

✂️ How to Harvest

Zinnias are excellent cut flowers. For the longest vase life, harvest when the flower is fully open and the stem is firm. A useful test is to gently wiggle the stem below the flower head. If the stem is floppy, wait longer. If it feels stiff and steady, the flower is ready to cut.

Harvest in the morning once the foliage is dry. Use clean snips and cut long stems just above a leaf node. Cutting deeply encourages the plant to produce more side shoots and flowers.

Remove lower leaves before placing stems in water. Use a clean vase and change the water regularly. Zinnias do not like dirty vase water, so clean stems and fresh water help them last longer.

For dried flowers, harvest blooms when fully open and fresh. Hang small bunches upside down in a dry, shaded, airy place. Some colour fading is normal, but drying away from direct sun helps preserve the strongest colour.

Only use petals as edible decoration if your seed supplier clearly states the variety is suitable for edible use and the plants have not been sprayed.

⚠️ Common Issues and Fixes

IssueLikely CauseFix
Poor germinationOld seed, deep sowing, cold wet soil, or seed rottingUse fresh seed, sow shallowly, and keep soil moist but not soggy
Seedlings disappearSlugs, snails, birds, ants, or cutwormsProtect young seedlings with barriers, collars, netting, or start in cells
Leggy seedlingsNot enough light or overcrowdingProvide full sun and thin seedlings early
Few flowersToo much nitrogen, too much shade, or lack of deadheadingReduce feeding, increase sunlight, and remove spent blooms
Weak stemsLow light, crowding, or overfeedingGrow in full sun, space properly, and avoid excess nitrogen
Plants falling overTall variety, wind, or no supportStake early or use flower netting
Yellow leavesWaterlogging, nutrient stress, or old lower foliageImprove drainage, feed lightly if needed, and remove old leaves
Powdery mildewPoor airflow, crowding, overhead watering, or plant stressSpace plants well, water at soil level, and remove affected leaves
Leaf spotsWet foliage, soil splash, or fungal diseaseMulch, water at the base, improve airflow, and remove marked leaves
AphidsSoft new growth or stressed plantsHose off gently, encourage ladybirds, and avoid overfeeding
Caterpillar damageChewing larvae feeding on leaves or budsInspect regularly and remove caterpillars by hand
Flowers fading quicklyOld blooms, heat stress, or late harvestingHarvest fresh blooms, deadhead often, and water deeply during dry spells

🌰 Detailed Seed Saving Guide

Saving zinnia seed is simple and rewarding. Choose the healthiest plants with the best flower colour, strong stems, good branching, and long flowering performance. Avoid saving seed from weak, diseased, mildew-prone, or poorly flowering plants.

Leave selected flowers on the plant after they fade. The flower head needs to dry fully before the seed is mature. A ready seed head will turn brown, dry, and papery. If rain or humidity is a problem, cut nearly dry heads and finish drying them indoors in a shaded, airy place.

Once the flower heads are completely dry, pull them apart gently with your fingers. Zinnia seeds are usually attached near the base of the petals and may look like small arrowhead-shaped pieces. Not every petal will have a full seed, so keep only firm, plump seeds and discard thin, empty, damaged, or mouldy pieces.

Spread the cleaned seed on a plate or tray for another week to ensure it is fully dry. This extra drying step helps prevent mould in storage.

Store the seed in a labelled paper envelope inside an airtight jar. Keep it somewhere cool, dark, and dry. Add a silica gel sachet if humidity is an issue.

Label the packet with the plant name, flower colour, flower form, plant height, collection date, and useful notes such as “strong stems”, “best red flowers”, “good for cutting”, or “compact pot type”.

If different zinnia colours and forms grow close together, saved seed may produce a mix of flower shapes and colours. This can be beautiful in informal gardens. For more consistent results, save seed from the plants that most closely match the traits you want.

🌸 Final Thoughts

Zinnia is one of the most satisfying flowers to grow from seed. It is colourful, fast, generous, pollinator-friendly, and excellent for cutting. With plenty of sun and good airflow, zinnias produce a long display of bright blooms with simple care.

For the best results, direct sow where possible, avoid overwatering, space plants well, pinch young plants for branching, deadhead often, and save seed from the strongest flowers. With these basics in place, zinnias can become one of the most dependable and joyful flowers in the garden.

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Postage Charge

Orders under $35 attract a $4.95 shipping charge. Orders $35 and above have free shipping.

Order Times

Seed orders are normally dispatched within three business days. You will receive an email when seeds are mailed out.

Postage Days

Seeds are mailed out Tuesday to Friday at 1pm. Except for the Friday of long weekends.

Postage Times

WA 2-3 Days: SA,NT 3-5 Days: NSW, ACT, QLD, VIC: 5-7 Days

Carrier

We use Australia Post Letter Postage for the majority of orders


Not only are our seeds packed in recycled paper envelopes, we keep the theme going when we post out website orders. To protect your seeds from moisture and the letter box munchers (snails), we use a very special plastic free material made from plants. They are then put into recycled mailing envelopes. Green all the way ????????


Delivery Guarantee

We take great care to make sure your seeds arrive safely. If your order is lost or damaged in transit, we’ll happily send a replacement. Unfortunately, we can’t replace or refund orders that arrive later than the estimated delivery date, as delays can sometimes occur that are outside our control.

Please note that all dispatch and delivery times listed are estimates only. While we do our best to post promptly, delivery timeframes can vary due to postal service delays, weather events, or other unforeseen circumstances. We’re unable to take responsibility for any loss, damage, or cost that results from a late delivery.

An order is not considered missing until at least 20 business days have passed from the postage date. You’ll receive an email once your seeds have been posted, letting you know they’re on their way. If you don’t see it in your main inbox, please check your Spam or Promotions folders as sometimes our emails like to hide there.

Zinnia MeteorZinnia Meteor
$4.95

In stock