Winter Seed Sowing
AFFORDABLE WAYS TO GROW YOUR OWN NATIVE PLANTS
Growing Native Plants from Seed
Native plants are essential to pollinators, local food webs and ecosystems. Despite high demand for pollinator-friendly flowers and shrubs, most traditional garden centers in Central Ohio sell plants that are native to Asia, Europe and other parts of the world. Unfortunately, exotic plants don’t support the full lifecycle of butterflies, wild bees and other pollinators, plus some are considered invasive.
Thankfully, it is relatively easy to grow your own native plants. The timing and techniques for growing native plants from seed are different, however, than those used for most vegetable garden plants such as cucumbers or tomatoes.
Winter seed sowing is a simple, space-saving way to mimic nature’s process of seed germination using recycled containers (like milk jugs) or screen protected pots.
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It can be hard for experienced vegetable gardeners to wrap their head around the idea that you need to start sowing native seeds in the middle of winter. Why? Because many native plant seeds need a period of cold exposure to trigger germination. This natural cycle of freezing followed by warming breaks down tough seed coats and increases the chances of successful sprouting. This process is called "stratification." (In the wild, the stratification process naturally occurs when seeds fall to the ground in the fall and overwinter before sprouting in the spring).
By sowing native seeds in milk jugs or protected pots and setting them outside during the winter months (typically December-March), the seeds receive the cold, moist conditions and stratification they need in order to germinate.
While you can replicate this cold stratification treatment in a refrigerator, winter sowing outside in repurposed containers is our recommended method. It’s inexpensive, doesn’t require special equipment, and eliminates the need for hardening off seedlings—a process that can be tricky for new and experienced gardeners alike.
Native plants seeds are planted in protected containers, such as milk jugs, during winter months.
Seedlings can be potted up into individual pots in spring or transplanted directly into garden.
EASY PLANT PROPAGATION METHODS
Winter Sowing: Two Ways
Using Recycled Jugs
This method uses semi-opaque milk or water jugs with drainage holes to create mini-greenhouses.
Using Screen-Protected Pots
This method uses pots covered with a screen (chicken wire or hardware cloth) to protect seeds from critters.
WINTER SOWING NATIVE PLANTS
Frequently Asked Questions
Q: What are the benefits of Winter Seed Sowing outside in containers?
A: There are MANY benefits to Winter Seed Sowing including:
Protection from Animals
Native seeds are a vital food source for pollinators, birds, and mammals, especially during the lean winter months. Planting seeds in milk jugs or pots covered with wire keeps them safe from hungry critters, ensuring they grow into plants that will produce seeds to feed wildlife in future years.
Protection from Competition
Soil from your garden contains weed seeds. By sowing seeds in pots with sterile potting soil, you give your plants a head start free from competition, which is important for slow-growing native species.
Eliminates Need for "Hardening Off"
Seedlings started indoors must be gradually acclimated to outdoor conditions—a process called “hardening off.” This can be time-consuming and stressful for both plants and gardeners. Winter-sown seedlings, however, grow outside from the start. They naturally adapt to changing temperatures, sunlight, and wind, eliminating the need for this extra step.
Ease of Watering
In winter, seeds get moisture from snow and rain and don't need supplemental watering. In spring, the seedlings will need to be watered regularly. Containers grouped together make it easier to water, saving you time and effort.
Easy to Move
Winter-sown pots are easy to move once it is time to pot-up seedlings or transplant them into the garden. You can also relocate them based on shade conditions or watering needs.
Easy to Gift
Have extra plants? Pots are simple to share with friends and neighbors (or donate to Pollinator Pathway projects or annual plant sale!) spreading the joy of native gardening!
Q: Can't I just toss seeds on the ground?
A: It’s a great question! After all, the plants you see growing in natural settings didn’t start in pots—they arrived via wind, animals, or water, found the right conditions, and started growing.
However, in nature, the odds are stacked against most seeds. For every wildflower blooming along a trail, dozens, hundreds, or even thousands of seeds didn’t make it. They may have landed on a rock, been eaten by birds, or washed away in a stream.
By starting native seeds in milk jugs or pots covered with chicken wire or screens you’re giving them a better chance to survive. This method shields them from hungry critters and harsh conditions while still allowing them to experience the cold and wet they need for germination. Plus, tending to your pots is much easier than trying to monitor seeds scattered across a field. Once your seeds germinate and grow into seedlings, you'll then be able to transplant them exactly where you want them to grow.
Q: Where can I get native plant seed?
A: One great place to pick up some native plant seed is at one of the community seed libraries in the county (while supplies last!). Pollinator Pathway volunteers hand-collected seeds from local prairies and gardens and packaged hundreds of seed packets for distribution at community seed libraries across the Licking County. Library patrons can "check out" free seed packets of Purple Coneflower, Little Bluestem, Rattlesnake Master & more than a dozen other native plant species at the Licking County Library in Newark, Mary E. Babcock Library in Johnstown, Homer Public Library, Granville Public Library and Pataskala Public Library.
Other great online sources of native plant seed include:
Ohio Prairie Nursery (OPN) Seed
Prairie Moon Nursery
Wild Seed Project
HANDS-ON LEARNING
Winter Seed Sowing Workshops
To help local residents create pollinator-friendly gardens and landscapes, Licking County Pollinator Pathway offers various native plant propagation programs, including winter sowing workshops.
Participants at these hands-on workshops learn how to grow native plants from seed for their home gardens using winter sowing techniques, plus have enough to “plant it forward” and pass along extra plants to neighbors or donate them to a Pollinator Pathway community project or plant sale. Similar to the "plant a row for the hungry" movement which encourages gardeners to grow extra vegetables for local food pantries, workshop participants are encouraged to “plant a plot for hungry pollinators."
In 2024, Pollinator Pathway offered a total of seven winter seed sowing workshops in partnership with local organizations at six different locations across the county, including Pataskala, Johnstown, Newark, Homer and Granville.
Using the "Plant by Numbers" Bumble Bee Garden design by Ohio State University as inspiration, workshop participants planted pollinator-friendly flowers and grasses including:
Culver’s root (Veronicastrum virginicum)
Hyssop (Agastache foeniculum)
Swamp milkweed (Asclepias incarnata)
Foxglove beardtongue (Penstemon digitalis)
Wild bergamot (Monarda fistulosa)
Virginia mountain mint (Pycnanthemum virginianum)
Riddell’s Goldenrod (Oligoneuron riddellii)
Little bluestem (Schizachyrium scoparium)
Common blue wood aster (Symphotrichum cordifolium)
GROWING GROWERS
Pollinator Pathway Branded Grow Boxes
Inspired by the Wild Seed Project and Eco59 Seed Collective, Licking County Pollinator Pathway volunteers constructed winter sowing seed boxes for native plant propagation. These cedar-framed boxes are hinged and have hardware cloth on both the top and bottom to protect the contents. Small (3" or 4") pots filled with native seeds are placed inside the boxes and then set outside for the winter. Seeds are cold stratified naturally outside and germinate later in spring. Seedlings grown in the boxes can be potted up into larger containers mid-summer or transplanted into the garden.
DIG DEEPER INTO WINTER SEED SOWING
Additional Resources
Eager to learn more about growing native plants using winter seed sowing methods? Here are a few of our favorite resources:
Wild Seed Project step-by-step instructions
Grow it Build it: video tutorial
Cliffcrest Butterflyway step-by-step instructions
UMD Extension video (or review their slide deck here)
Joe Gardener article: Winter Sowing: A Simple Way to Successfully Start Seeds Outdoors
This project made possible with support from the Denison Venture Philanthropy Fund
Additional in-kind support provided by
Special thanks to Wild Seed Project and Eco59 for inspiring this project and to Morgan Seidling - MKS Digital Creations for creation of the custom winter sowing illustrations: