Gardens
How to Grow Sunflowers & Harvest Sunflower Seeds
As summer nears its end, sunflower season begins! Learn how to grow sunflowers and harvest sunflower seeds with our guide to these garden favorites.

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Photo Credit : Katherine Keenan
Photo Credit : Pixabay
How to Grow Sunflowers
Sunflowers are perhaps some of the easiest flowers to grow—simply plant each seed a few inches into the ground and water occasionally in the spring. Sunflower seeds will thrive in most soil types and are often inadvertently seeded by the birds and mammals that eat them. As long as they receive full sun, these flowers will do well with very little care at all.History of Growing Sunflowers
Native to the Americas, the sunflower has long been a symbol of happiness, vitality, long life, and good luck. For centuries, Native Americans cultivated sunflowers for a variety of purposes: sunflower seeds were used as a food source and in bread recipes, while seed oil was extracted and used in cooking and medical remedies. A number of dyes and paints can also be made from the flower’s parts.Benefits of Growing Sunflowers
It goes without saying that sunflowers are beautiful to look at, and it’s well known that they’re a source of food for both humans and animals, but they have one other significant and lesser-known benefit too: sunflowers have the ability to remove toxins such as lead, arsenic, and uranium from contaminated soil and wetland areas. In fact, sunflowers were used after the Fukushima nuclear disaster to help extract dangerous toxins from the soil.Types of Sunflowers: Cultivated vs. Wild
Cultivated sunflowers produce a single stem with a large seed head, while wild sunflowers develop branched stems with small heads and even smaller seeds. In the over fifty types of sunflowers, petal colors can range from pinkish or brownish hues to all shades of yellow and orange. Some varieties can even have striped petals!Types of Sunflower Seeds
There are two types of sunflower seeds: black seeds and striped seeds. The black seeds are higher in oil content and are often used to make oil, while striped seeds are typically used as food for humans and animals. Despite their differences, both seeds share the same flavor.
Photo Credit : Pixabay
How to Harvest Sunflower Seeds
When the back of a sunflower’s flower head turns from green to brown and becomes dry, seeds are usually ready to be harvested. To harvest, cut the head off the plant a few inches below the flower and remove the seeds with your fingers or a small tool, such as a butter knife. You can also cut the flower heads early—before it turns brown and before the birds start to eat the seeds—though the seeds will not be dry enough to eat at this point. If you do cut the heads off a bit early, just follow the same cutting directions as outlined above, then hang the heads upside down in a dry place that is safe from pests until the head is dry and brown. At this point, the seeds should become loose from the head and can be easily removed. Any sunflower heads not harvested for personal use can be saved and used to feed hungry birds in the winter! For an additional seed-harvesting method, check out How to Harvest Sunflower Seeds.A Few Fun Sunflower Varieties to Try:
- Towering Mammoth – A giant sunflower with stems up to fifteen feet tall and heads as large as dinner plates! Towering Mammoths produce great seeds for eating.
- Sunbeam (or Vincent Van Gogh Sunflowers) – These sunflowers can grow up to five feet tall and produce golden-yellow flowers that are about five inches wide.
- Teddy Bear – Although these flowers only grow up to three feet tall, they sport very impressive blooms that are golden and fluffy.
Great article! Would love to try growing some of these.
Thank you for reading! Sunflowers can be grown anywhere as long as they are planted where it is sunny and warm enough to complete their life cycle!
I planted 8 sunflower seeds this year and all of them came up. They are small and not sure if it’s because I planted the seeds in late May! I am definitely going to plant more next year!
Great article! I continue to be inspired by them!
CAN SUNFLOWERS BE GROWN IN SOUTHWEST FLORIDA?
I have grown many sunflowers many times and find in the deep south you
have to water them lot, lot and they need plenty of sun I love them though they leave a huge hole in your yard when they are done
How do I keep the squirrels from bending the stalk and eating the seeds?
I have grown a few sunflowers but this year wanted half my “old” garden filled with them.. found out the hard and sad way that groundhogs ate all my plants when they were just coming up!! next summer we’ll fence in the areas where I want to plant them again!
Unfortunately I do not know of a proven way to deter the squirrels from bending the stems of large sunflowers. Readers?….
Cayenne pepper all around the plant on top of soil
Thank you I’m going to try this. Planted just a few mammoths and they started to grow but were munched before they were even 10″ tall 🙁
The only way would be to encase much of the plant with chicken wire as we do here to protect growing vegetables in the garden. Won’t stop birds but will stop the furry critters including pack rats.
Your article is great, I have more information and experience to grow sunflowers in my garden garden. And the sunflower garden will become the most beautiful when blooming.
I live in CT. How late can you plant your seeds for same year blooms? And, are they annuals or perennials?
I believe they are annuals. I have planted seeds last year and had a beautiful group of sunflowers but they did not come back this year. Maybe just this variety but they did not come back. My mint did (planted in same container) and that comes back each spring.