
Cosmea
Cosmos bipinnatus
Engels: Cosmos
Cosmea (Cosmos bipinnatus) is a annual from the Asteraceae family that grows up to 150cm tall. This plant thrives in full sun and requires low maintenance. Blooms in summer and late summer and autumn with pink, white, red flowers and attracts bees and butterflies.
60–150 cm
40–60 cm
full sun
low water needs
loam, sandy soil
low maintenance
summer, late summer, autumn
pink, white, red
Ecologische waarde
Verzorgingskalender
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Care tips
Planting
Cosmos thrives in full sun and tolerates poor to moderately fertile soil, making it one of the easiest annuals to grow. It performs best in loam or sandy soil with good drainage; overly rich soil encourages lush foliage at the expense of flowers. Choose a sunny, open spot where plants will receive at least six hours of direct sunlight daily. You can sow cosmos directly outdoors from April onwards, once the risk of hard frost has passed, or continue sowing through May and June for successive blooms. Prepare the soil by removing weeds and raking to a fine tilth, but avoid adding compost or fertiliser—cosmos actually flowers more profusely in lean conditions. Sow seeds thinly, scattering them on the surface or pressing them lightly into the soil; they need light to germinate, so cover with no more than a few millimetres of fine soil or vermiculite. Space sowings or thin seedlings to 40 cm apart to allow good air circulation and room for the plants to bush out. Germination typically takes seven to fourteen days. If starting indoors in modules in April, transplant seedlings outside in late May after hardening off for a week. Water gently after sowing to settle the soil, but thereafter cosmos needs very little attention. Avoid overwatering, as these plants are naturally drought-tolerant. Taller varieties (up to 150 cm) may benefit from light staking or planting in a sheltered spot if your garden is exposed to strong winds, though their wiry stems are surprisingly resilient. No mulching is necessary.
Pruning
Cosmos doesn't require formal pruning in the traditional sense, but regular deadheading is the single most important task to keep plants flowering prolifically from summer right through to the first frosts in autumn. As soon as individual flowers fade, snip them off just above the next set of leaves or buds using secateurs or sharp scissors. This prevents the plant from setting seed and redirects energy into producing more blooms. Left undeadheaded, cosmos will slow down flowering considerably by late summer. If you want to save seed for next year, allow a few flower heads to mature fully on the plant in late September or October. The seeds are long, dark, and needle-like, easy to collect once the petals have dropped and the seed head has dried. Store them in a paper envelope in a cool, dry place. In midsummer, if plants become leggy or start to flop, you can lightly trim back the top third of the stems to encourage bushier growth and a fresh flush of flowers. This is optional but can rejuvenate tired-looking plants, especially if they've been battered by heavy rain. At the end of the season, once flowering has finished and frost has blackened the foliage, pull up the entire plant and add it to your compost heap. Cosmos is a true annual and won't survive winter, so there's no point leaving it in the ground. Clear away all plant material to keep borders tidy and reduce overwintering sites for pests.
Maintenance
Cosmos is genuinely low-maintenance and thrives on neglect. Water sparingly, only during prolonged dry spells in summer, and even then only if plants show signs of real stress such as wilting in the evening. Overwatering or planting in heavy, moisture-retentive soil can lead to weak, floppy growth and fewer flowers. Once established, cosmos is remarkably drought-tolerant thanks to its deep taproot. Feeding is not necessary and actively discouraged. Applying fertiliser, especially nitrogen-rich formulas, results in tall, leafy plants with disappointing flower production. The plant evolved in poor Mexican soils and performs best when left to fend for itself in lean conditions. If your soil is very poor, a single light application of a balanced general fertiliser at planting time is the absolute maximum. Cosmos is rarely troubled by pests or diseases. Aphids occasionally cluster on young shoot tips in early summer; a strong jet of water or a spray of dilute washing-up liquid usually resolves the problem. Slugs and snails may nibble seedlings in wet springs, so protect young plants with grit, copper tape, or organic pellets until they're 15–20 cm tall. Powdery mildew can appear on foliage in late summer during humid weather, but it rarely affects flowering and can be ignored. No overwintering care is needed, as cosmos is a frost-tender annual. However, if you allow some seed heads to self-sow, you may find volunteer seedlings appearing the following spring—though they'll usually flower later than deliberately sown plants.
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