Here I have Korean Mint Seeds for your garden.
To save on postage these seeds will ship in a letter envelope with no tracking and no refunds for people who say "the seeds never arrived"! :-o
You will receive 1/4 teaspoon seeds. For a fun project my little nieces and nephew helped me collect these seeds. They very diligently squeezed the seed heads to try to extract more seeds. I didn't have the heart to stop their diligence! Consequently I don't know if there is an excessive amount of immature seeds mixed in or not. The final picture shows you an example of 1/4 teaspoon of seeds. There should be plenty of seeds by far for your garden! :-)
Korean Mint may grow up to 3 feet tall and wide or it may remain smaller. The flower spikes, I find are generally several inches long and about as thick as my fingers. The flowers are attractive to pollinators and butterflies AND humans, AND friendly little birds love the seeds.........
Here is a little story I wrote this past summer:
Several Korean Mint plants came up on the animal's side of our fence. Apparently goats aren't super fond of Korean Mint! For they avoided those plants to my delight! They bloomed with their pretty flowers which then turned into seed heads. The other day I walked from the wash line to the house I heard a delightful twitter of a little bird and then I saw a flitter of golden yellow coming down from the trees over there. I looked, and did you guess? Yes, it was a happy Goldfinch who came down to lit on the Korean Mint and there it spent quite a while gleaning the tiny seeds. I was quite delighted!
Korean Mint may be grown in zones 4 - 9 (Google says). In warmer areas it will remain as a short lived perennial and in the colder areas it is an annual. In my zone 5/6 garden the foliage all dies back for winter and grows out beautiful again in the spring.
Although it is in the mint family it does not spread by runners as a number of mints do. The plant remains a tight clump at the base. It will readily multiply by seed if you do not dead head the spent flowers. Regardless I find if I have too many plants coming up in my garden I can pull them out very easily. I do not consider it aggressive in my garden.
Korean Mint is also known as purple giant hyssop, wrinkled giant hyssop, Indian mint, blue licorice, Chinese patchouli or Korean hyssop but it IS NOT the same as anise hyssop!
I also have other varieties of plant seeds listed. If you would like to purchase more than one variety please see my listing for All My Seeds where you can purchase with one flat rate postage no matter how many seeds you purchase! :-)
Please check out my other listings as well. I generally check emails at least 2 times a day (except not on Sunday), so I generally will get back with you promptly!