🌟 Cultivate Joy for You and Your Cat!
NatureZ Edge Catnip Seeds offer over 2200 non-GMO seeds, perfect for creating a lush catnip garden that stimulates and relaxes your cats. Hand-packed with care by a small family business, these seeds are freshly harvested and stored in climate-controlled conditions to ensure optimal growth. Ideal for both indoor and outdoor planting, they thrive in full sun or partial shade, making them a versatile addition to any garden.
Product Care Instructions | Water |
Material Features | GMO Free, Heirloom |
Color | Brown |
Unit Count | 1700 Count |
Number of Pieces | 1700 |
USDA Hardiness Zone | 3 |
Soil Type | Sandy Soil |
Moisture Needs | Moderate Watering |
Sunlight Exposure | Full Sun, Partial Shade |
Indoor Outdoor Usage | Indoor |
F**
Easy care
They’re good, it takes them a little to sprout but is great for a small pot. I have them in a horizontal pot and they receive sun just in the morning, I saw some sprouts just yesterday! I’m so happy, I put them for my apartment cat so he has something to look and play when he goes to the balcony.
F**E
Fast and excellent results!
Followed the instructions and I got excellent results and faster than I expected too! My cats absolutely love it! Next time I’ll thin out the seeds because they were a tad difficult to work with being so tiny. But I highly recommend these seeds and would purchase again, you won’t be disappointed.
I**L
Don't soak the seeds
This was such a horrible experience it prompted me to write this review, The packaging says it's best cold stratified and recommended freezing for 24 hrs then soaking the seeds for an additional 24 hours (never have had to do that but okay) so now after 2 days I go to plant, well the seeds were all stuck together and/or stuck to the soaking container making it difficult to come out of the container, so now I have to figure how to get them out, using my seed needle didn't work so I tried just using my hand, SUCCESS or so I thought, a good portion of the seeds were broken and will probably not render anything! another good portion of the seeds are still stuck to the soaking container. I probably got a whopping 1/3 of the seeds planted and the germination is TBD will probably update... I want a refund as of now
M**N
So far, so good!
Extremely new to gardening, here!After just a week, exactly, these tiny little guys seemed to have sprouted overnight! I soaked some of them in water for 24 hours first, then wrapped them with a filter-like sleeve(that were bundled with another purchased item), slid them into a ziploc bag and put them in the freezer for another 24. Then resoaked them in warm water for ANOTHER 24 hours! Haha.Then, I think I wet the soil first before—quite tediously and messily—fighting with scraping the teeny tiny wet seeds into it. That took nearly 7 minutes!🤣As a test, I sprinkled more seeds in straight from the pouch without soaking or freezing first, and spread all the seeds gently half an inch beneath the soil with light taking drags of my fingers.Possibly because I used a paper bowl, the soil literally stayed moist the entire week, so far, and still is a little. I also placed them a short distance from a window, so they have been receiving indirect light.The only downside for this “experiment” is those seeds were such a hassle and a half for me to get off my fingers and into the dirt, that they are completely scattered—so I’ve no idea which ones were stratified vs which ones weren’t!🤣But hey! They’re growing, at least!!💪💪🌸🌸 I’ll update as they grow!UPDATE!: They we’re progressing slowly indoors, so I made the mistake of placing them outside in better sunlight to thrive. BAD IDEA!!!😭They all died, and I don’t know why. No wild critter ate them; there wasn’t any fungus or anything strange on them. They had great sunlight and were watered when the dirt were dry, just like what I did indoors. What’s even stranger was I placed another pot outside, with seeds right out the bag in them—no soaking or stratification beforehand—and they sprouted in about less than a week, this time. They were doing lovely outside for an additional two or three weeks. Then, they started to wilt like the ones that had once been doing fine indoors did.Not a clue as to what went wrong! Welp, while it were a thrill watching these seedlings grow from a teeny tiny seed, I’d rather actually have some catnip, so I’ll likely lean more towards the starter plant route if I want to keep trying to grow some stronger ones!🤣 Tho, with all these leftover seeds, I may as well do something with em!
J**S
Have not fully grown the Cat Cocaine.
I have yet to endorse or denounce this product just yet.I will offer my experience, then come back to give an update on my experience.It is hot as heck in California. I was hoping to provide my indoor and outdoor cats something to get their mind off the heat. The Separate, individual packets contain amazingly SMALL seeds. They match similar to Poppy Seeds. They recommend you FREEZE then Soak the seeds over night. Contrary, some reviewers do not do this.A visit to their site seemed to advise outdoor growing do the Freezing, Soaking. That is what I have done.Into a Freezer Seal Bag they went. Not as easy as thought. The TINY seeds have no weight and stick to clean back. Static would be a nightmare. On a wide cloth napkin, I poured them onto a COFFEE FILTER. Soaking and collecting them was FAR from easy if you have no plan.I dumped them into water. I dumped them into a Stain-Steel kitchen container. Some 24-hrs later, they were floating in water - and Chaos. I did NOT have a coffee filter size strainer to hold the filter. I laid the filter in a smaller filter-size Stainless steel container. Fingers pulled up all sided -- evenly. Water drained.Next, the filter was drained in a pouch.Next, I let it dry for a day.The seeds flaked off easily.A mixture of mostly yard soil with steer manure was prepared in a big tub. (another was done in a wide mouth pot with a.. five-inch dept. Hole for drainage. My understanding by trail-and-error, the seeds love water. Some two weeks, and very little action on the first one.My conclusion came after using a Colander to simulate rain. I added more water really soaking the soil over a quarter-inch. The 'moist' soil seen little action, but action none-the-less. The soaking seem to spark serious growth. The container is out in some direct Sun for the morning. It never changed when I soaked the soil.I have to point out that I used two packets.The colander drenching provided me TWO PACKETS of quarter to half (and more) inch of growth. I read how SOME but not all. I mean, every seed seems to growing despite reviews saying some grow, some do not.This is where I am some two weeks behind.TO THE SELLER: explain to the potential customers that you have some customers in frosty cold. Some are not. Those in frosty weather do NOT need to freeze the seeds and soak them. I am not in frosty weather, so I MIMIC frost and the melted water saturating the Spring seeds in the FREEZER and Stainless Steel pan and Coffee Filter.You make no sense why we must do it. Cursive internet research, some do and don't, but do not say why.So, educate us in the simulation seeds in Winter soil get watered by Spring melting. It makes a nice story and good reason to follow your directives.As of now, the give or take 16-inch tub is doing great in the growth, in partial shaded to early morning and mid day Sun-fest - temps (70's to 89-90-degrees) The Pottery is showing a baby plant after about two-weeks.I will update you on a very promising adventure -- we have homeless kittens and mother (with surrogate) with indoor-outdoor cats who could use something to take their mind off the heat and water issues.(BTW: I read catnip helps with fleas)
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