Rhodiola (Rhodiola rosea), packet of 100 seeds

(3 customer reviews)

$5.95

Family: Stonecrop (Crassulacea)

Hardy to Zones 1 to 7

(Sedum rhodiola, Golden Root, Rose Root)  Perennial, fleshy succulent.  There are a number of different ecotypes of Rhodiola rosea. Glycoside (e.g. rosavin, rosin) content is variable depending on ecotype. Our seed is collected only from cultivated plants. *  This is a high rosavin type.  The dried roots are rose-scented.  Traditional use (TWM): tonic, adaptogenic. Plant prefers sun at altitude and shade to part shade at lower elevations.  Plant in calcareous soil or rock garden. Flowers to 10 inches.  Seed is very tiny and can be mixed with sand prior to planting to help make an even distribution.  Sow seed on surface of fast-draining potting soil in flat or pot and press in securely.  Best to sow seed in fall or very early spring and subject the planting to outdoor conditions–snow, rain, and temperature oscillation all stimulate germination.  Lacking outdoor conditions, the seed may be stratified for 90 days in moist medium in the refrigerator, then surface-sown in cool shade.  Germination is in the spring.  Individuate seedlings and work up in successively larger pots until they are sufficiently sized to transplant to the landscape. Space 1 foot apart.  Rhodiola may also be gainfully grown in pots to maturity–it makes an interesting succulent plant, steeped in folklore, honored by herbalists, with a nice yellow flower.

100 seeds/pkt., Open Pollinated, Untreated, NO GMO’s

  •  All species of Rhodiola were listed in appendix II of the convention for international trade in endangered species (CITES) in 2022. This makes wild collection and distribution illegal.  We are selling seed from cultivated plants and encouraging the cultivation of Rhodiola to help conserve the plants.

 

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5 out of 5 stars

3 reviews

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What others are saying

  1. jasperdshide

    Delicate seedlings

    jasperdshide (verified owner)

    Gibberellic acid works fine in lieu of stratification, but that’s where the easy bit ends. The itty bitty seedlings take a lot of babying and WILL keel over and die if they’re too moist, too dry, or if they sense that you’re starting to think you’ve got the hang of growing them. Thankfully they’re much easier to care for when grown (or so I’m told, none of my seedlings made it that far!)

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  2. Question

    Liala Gianstefani

    Hi there, what a wonderful site! All my favourites! Do you ship to New Zealand? Many thanks, Liala ??

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    • Richo Cech

      Richo Cech

      Hello Liala, I wish we could! New Zealand, AUS and countries in the EU are destroying our seed shipments. We give up! Richo

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  3. Question

    Gonzalo

    Hi, Can you send to Buenos Aires, Argentina??

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  4. Question

    Chen, Wei Hao. (verified owner)

    Hi,
    May I have bulk seeds of rhodiola rosea? Thank you.

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  5. Question

    PATRICIA C.

    Once the plant is grown, how is it utilized? Is only the root used and how? Or can leaves be eaten or made into tea?

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    • 3 out of 3 people found this helpful
      Richo Cech

      Richo Cech

      Hello Patricia, It’s the root itself that is used, sliced fine and dried. you can find out all about how to make the tincture by reading pages 251 to 252 of “Making Plant Medicine.” richo

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  6. Question

    Stenzin Durieux Laurence

    Hi
    When do you forsee getting more Russian Rhodeola seeds in? and do you send it to France ? is it the elongata ?
    thanks for replied
    Laurence

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    • Richo Cech

      Richo Cech

      Hi Stenzin,
      We’ll start taking new orders on Russian Rhodiola on Sep 1 2020. It is the rosea, not elongata. We can’t send seeds to any country in the EUY. do you have an address in England?
      Richo

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  7. Question

    Kathi McCallum

    I live in a high altitude mountainous, desert area of Colorado. I am looking for medicinal plants to grow here and rhodiola is definitely on my list. Temperatures here rarely get into the 80s in the summer and stay mostly below 40 in the winter. It seems, from what I have read, rhodiola may adapt to this area. What do you think and please share any advice you may offer. Also, if you know of other medicial plants that do well in this type of area, please let me know. Thanks! Kathi

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  8. Question

    Brigid

    What is your take on attempting to grow in zone 8b on the gulf coast? I realize it is well out of this herbs preferred climate.

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  9. Question

    Arcadio Marianella

    When do you forsee getting more Russian Rhodeola seeds in?

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    • Richo Cech

      Admin Richo Cech

      New harvest currently in stock. richo

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    • One person found this helpful

      tabreaux (verified owner)

      From Alabama, USA (Zone 7/8): Germination is easy and rapid (10 days here), but cultivating boreal species in our long, hot summers makes for an uphill climb. Seeds were sown indoors in early December, and seedlings grown indoors until after the last hard freeze. Plants here have withstood two summers, and are growing slowly. Protection from the hot summer sun is necessary. Mine receive direct sunlight only during early morning and dusk hours. Misting to cool the aerial parts frequently during hot weather seems to be appreciated, but care must be taken not to allow the growing medium (grit and compost with a bit of garden lime) to become waterlogged for any length of time.

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    • Feli

      Would these grow well in Alaska? What other medicinal seeds would you recommend for up here? Thanks!

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    • Richo Cech

      Richo Cech

      Hello Feli, they are native to Alaska! Beyond cabbage, which I hear grows to monumental size in Alaska, the medicinals that will do best are the cold zone medicinals. I would run a search for “Zone 3” on this website and filter out the obvious warm-weather herbs. You’re left with things like Saint John’s Wort which are extremely cold-hardy and honestly among the best herbal medicines. Richo

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    • Angela Hendrickson

      Hi Richo, is it possible to germinate these without chilling them for 90 days? Can they germinate right out of the packet after sown?

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    • Richo Cech

      Richo Cech

      Hi Angela,
      No, they are what’s known as a “frost germinator,” they’re going to do best when sown outdoors. For instance I planted mine 2 weeks ago and expect to see germ come spring.
      Richo

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    • Angela

      Is there any chance you’d be selling some of these live? I live on the Oregon coast and it never freezes here. Thanks for all your knowledge!

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    • Richo Cech

      Richo Cech

      Hello Angela,
      Not only a chance, pretty much a confirmation. It is so very serendipitous that you wrote this, I was literally out in the greenhouse communicating with staff about transplanting techniques on Rhodiola and examining several hundred seedlings before I came in to read this. We’re on it, stay in touch, we’ll only sell the plants when they are properly sized up.
      Richo

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    • Deborah

      What is the difference between the roses and the crenulata?

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    • Richo Cech

      Richo Cech

      Rhodiola crenulata is an accepted species, a succulent native to China and Tibet. it does contain some of the same active constituents as Rhodiola rosea, which is official. crenulata contains less of the Rosavin constituent, I consider it a less than ideal substitute for the real thing. Richo

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