How to Avoid Weed-Filled Wildflower Mixes

By Greta Gramig and Ph.D.
Published on May 10, 2013
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Oxeye daisies growing in a garden or natural area.
Oxeye daisies growing in a garden or natural area.
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A group of colorful California poppies growing in a garden or natural area.
A group of colorful California poppies growing in a garden or natural area.
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A sea of yellow achillea growing in a garden or natural area.
A sea of yellow achillea growing in a garden or natural area.

Wildflower mixes offer a quick and easy way to create vibrant meadow gardens of colorful blooms, providing long-lasting beauty and a habitat for birds and butterflies. If you plant the wrong mix, though, you could end up with invasive or weedy plants as unintended guests in your yard.

One example: A wildflower mix was the source of an Oregon infestation of Paterson’s curse (Echium plantagineum), an exotic noxious weed native to the Mediterranean. This drought-tolerant plant is poisonous to grazing animals and can produce skin irritation and hay fever in humans.

University of Washington researchers shed light on the problem of weeds in wildflower mixes, examining 19 seed packets to see what lurked inside. Almost half contained seeds of plants considered noxious weeds in at least one U.S. state or Canadian province, such as dame’s rocket (Hesperis matronalis), oxeye daisy (Leucanthemum vulgare), Queen Anne’s lace (Daucus carota), and yellow toadflax (Linaria vulgaris).

In addition to noxious weeds, all the wildflower seed mixes in the study contained plants that can grow invasively under the right conditions. One example is common yarrow (Achillea millefolium), an aggressive grower that spreads through rhizomes and can crowd out desired species.

Even some of the ornamentals found in wildflower mixes can wreak havoc if they escape into the wild from their desired location. For example, bachelor’s buttons (Centaurea cyanus) is a prolifically blooming annual found in many wildflower mixes. Though well-behaved in most home gardens, bachelor’s buttons can aggressively out-compete native plants in a natural area. The same is true of the California poppy (Eschscholzia californica), another frequent favorite in mixed wildflower seed packets.

What can you do to keep noxious weeds and other invasive plants out of your wildflower garden and natural areas? First and foremost, you can be careful about what seeds you buy. Here are a few tips that can help:

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