Sweet William is perfect for decorating flower beds and garden boxes.
Key Sweet William facts
Name – Dianthus barbatus
Family – Caryophyllaceae
Type – biennial
Height – 8 to 16 inches (20 to 40 cm)
Exposure – full sun, part sun
Soil – well drained, ordinary
Sowing: end of spring → summer  –  Flowering: summer → fall
Large clusters of flowers are what make the Dianthus barbatus carnation stand out.
Planting, sowing sweet William
How to sow sweet William
Sweet William is sown at the end of spring or in summer for it to bloom in the following year.
Broadcast seeds without covering them after sowing, since they need light of day to sprout.
- Water using a gentle spray until seeds sprout without flooding your Sweet William seeds.
- Sprouting usually occurs about 1 week after sowing.
- Transplant sweet William in fall outdoors, spacing them about 8Â inches (20Â cm) apart.
- Let your carnation spend the winter outdoors.
Note that your sweet William will need sufficient sun to bloom, at least 3 to 4 hours of direct sunlight a day.
Caring for sweet William
Sweet William carnation doesn’t require any care once it is properly settled in. Performing these few tasks will help enhance and extend the blooming.
- To stimulate appearance of new flowers, cut wilted flowers regularly (deadheading).
- The act of cutting wilting flowers off as they die helps prepare a second blooming towards the end of the season.
- Water in case of prolonged dry spells or heat wave only.
All there is to know about sweet William
Native to Northern Europe and Asia, the Sweet William carnation variety is sought after for its cute flowers that make superb colored bouquets, and also for its leaves and stems that make it an easy flower to cut and pair.
Its flowers are striped and only rarely of a solid color, and thus bestow pinks and whites, purples and cream colors, fuchsia and pink or even violet and black.
Smart tip about Sweet William
Sweet William flowers are vulnerable to rust. To avoid this, rotate them to a different spot from one year to the next.
- Read all our gardening info-pages about carnation
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