20 Water Lotus Seeds for Planting, Already Opened Bowl Lotus Seeds for DIY Home Planting (Mixed Colors)

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Germination 90%, Flowering from June to September
More seeds and using the High Quality Packaging
Very easy to grow, Please see the second picture and description for planting instructions.
Panago Seeds: all hand packaged, family business
Enjoy the joy of planting?Seeds Can be Sown all the year round

Description

Planting Instruction:
1 These seeds are already opened, and you can put them directly in warm water for germination.The water should be between 70 and 90 degrees Fahrenheit.
2 Change the water twice a day. Over the next 3 days, the seeds will begin to appear lumpy. Shortly after that, they will begin to sprout.
3Put about 3 inches of soil in the bottom of a plastic bucket. Plain garden soil will work well. Add enough water to the bucket to cover the soil by about 3 inches. Let the bucket sit overnight to allow the soil to settle.
4Plant the seed about 1 inch deep.
5Transplant the lotus to its final growing place after a couple of weeks. This should not be done until the lotus has a number of leaves floating on top of the water in the bucket.
6Plant the lotus in 3-5 inches of soil in its final growing place.
Please put the seeds in a sunny place and enjoy planting.
About Lotus seeds:

Zones 4 - 11.
This aquatic perennial's tuberous roots colonize the soil at the bottom of earth-bottom ponds, or the soil in containers fully submerged in lined ponds.
The stems of the leaves can reach the surface of water that's nearly two feet deep?and then continue upward, above the water, a few inches or even a foot farther.
The roots don't tolerate frost but the tubers and roots are hardy anywhere the water above the soil is deep enough that the pond's surface-ice doesn't freeze all the way down to the soil, and yet is not so deep that their leaves can't reach at least a bit above the water's surface to get the full sun they need to grow and flower:
From the frost-free tropics of Zone 11, then, all the way down to the seriously-Wintered Zone 4 of Northern Vermont and Canada. Few plants, aquatic or terrestrial, have such a world-wide versatility.