Discussion
It's like the timid deer of the plant world, once it's stressed it will bolt and go to seed or drop dead.
Things that stress it include:
Too much light
Not enough light
Too much water
Not enough water
Too much heat
Not enough heat
Looking at it
Touching it
Breathing on it
Being in the same house as it
Thinking about it
Best to just buy it as and when needed.
Things that stress it include:
Too much light
Not enough light
Too much water
Not enough water
Too much heat
Not enough heat
Looking at it
Touching it
Breathing on it
Being in the same house as it
Thinking about it
Best to just buy it as and when needed.
It's fairly easy to grow indoors just using the coriander seeds you'd buy as whole spices. Stick a few in some compost, water and wait.
But - it bolts to seed almost as soon as you look at it. I'm sure commercial crops are sprayed with a plant hormone to retard this process.
In the domestic setting I find it works best if you sow every fortnight for continuous cropping.
But - it bolts to seed almost as soon as you look at it. I'm sure commercial crops are sprayed with a plant hormone to retard this process.
In the domestic setting I find it works best if you sow every fortnight for continuous cropping.
soad said:
Hello I'm soad, and also a plant killer!
I reckon it isn't a proper compost in those tiny pots...or coriander is way too temperamental.
Other herbs can lasts ages, relatively speaking. Try rosemary and dump it outdoors (not during the winter, obviously).
Rosemary is fine outside all year round, it's an evergreen.I reckon it isn't a proper compost in those tiny pots...or coriander is way too temperamental.
Other herbs can lasts ages, relatively speaking. Try rosemary and dump it outdoors (not during the winter, obviously).
227bhp said:
Rosemary is fine outside all year round, it's an evergreen.
I don't bother growing it because its a fussy bugger. I get a big bunch from the Asian supermarket round the corner for about 60p and it lasts for a week or so in the fridge.Great herb though. Love it in curries, chillies, salsas, and asian dishes.
The way the supermarkets grow coriander in pots isn't really the way it likes to grow, which is part of the problem. Each seed can grow into a massive plant and as such it likes to have a lot of space and put down deep tap roots (it's a member of the carrot family) which those little pots wouldn't even allow one plant to do never mind the 20 or so that are there.
The supermarkets must have found that growing it as densely as they do gets them the most acceptable leafage in minimum time.
Same story with parsley (also a carrot).
Only real solution is to grow it outside, or sow thinly in a massive pot.
The supermarkets must have found that growing it as densely as they do gets them the most acceptable leafage in minimum time.
Same story with parsley (also a carrot).
Only real solution is to grow it outside, or sow thinly in a massive pot.
prand said:
227bhp said:
Rosemary is fine outside all year round, it's an evergreen.
I don't bother growing it because its a fussy bugger. I get a big bunch from the Asian supermarket round the corner for about 60p and it lasts for a week or so in the fridge.Great herb though. Love it in curries, chillies, salsas, and asian dishes.
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