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#1
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Cilantro
Does anyone have any luck growing this in the house? I live in Texas and even
if I plant it outside, the heat dries it up pretty fast. Other herbs last all summer, but not cilantro. |
#2
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Cilantro
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#3
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Cilantro
I am partial to the old fashioned Roman Cilantro (a.k.a. Parsley), myself!
Snowfeet1 wrote in message ... Does anyone have any luck growing this in the house? I live in Texas and even if I plant it outside, the heat dries it up pretty fast. Other herbs last all summer, but not cilantro. |
#4
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Cilantro
Cilantro is a cool season herb. I think they grow best in the 50-60's
temps. I'm in zone 7b, North Carolina, and I planted a couple of cilantro plants in my garden one spring. Well, they grew quickly and started bolting (going to flower-seed) because our temps heat up quickly in April with upper 90's throughout the summer. I left the plants and let them develop seed pods. The following spring I had lots of babies sprouting up all over the place. I cut and cut while the weather was cool. I used pint sized freezer containers and froze the chopped cilantro in blocks of water. During the summer when I needed cilantro for a recipe, I would let the block of ice melt into a metal strainer. I had my cilantro in 1/2 day sun in the beginning and when babies starting popping up, I transplanted a bunch in between my leaf lettuce in full sun. They were gorgeous and full. Hope this helps. Penny Zone 7b - North Carolina "Snowfeet1" wrote in message ... Does anyone have any luck growing this in the house? I live in Texas and even if I plant it outside, the heat dries it up pretty fast. Other herbs last all summer, but not cilantro. |
#5
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Cilantro
As a recovering farmer I have grown many many bushels of cilantro in
my time... never in the house however! But a lot in the greenhouse, so here are my educated observations, ignore them at your own risk! Cilantro loves cold weather!! It will survive the winter here in zone 6b. It will not tolerate heat or dry! It is a VERY short liver annual, don't believe anyone who says it will produce for any length of time! They don't know what they are talking about! If you want a constant supply you will need to start some every couple of weeks, a 6 inch pot can easily produce 3 large buches of cilantro. Fill the pot with a good soil (promix?) pack it gently to about 1 inch from the top place a LOT of cilantro seeds on the top, 4-8 per sqaure inch!! Cover with 1/4 inch and BOTTOM water. It can take a long time (10 days) to germinate. Feed miracle grow, or 20-20-20 at a high rate (200-250 ppm N)...I think that was about 1 T+/gallon, bottom water! Careful to not over/under water!! (The perenial problem!) Plenty of sun, close to a window, or once germinated a cool porch (anything above freezing is fine!) Don't wait to use it! Once it gets 6 inches high use it as much as possible, you can pick the outer leaves and SOME new ones will regrow.... maybe. Once you see the pencil sized seed stalk grab (for use)the leaves and harden your heart to kill the pot.... so you can replant. This is a great method even for summer since you can put the pot in a shadier place as it gets hot. I have grown a LOT (100's of bushels) of cilantro, dill (plant as thickly), and basil (10-15/pot) like this, small scale commercially, I used 6 inch nursery pots that are cheap to buy or if you only need 20 or so easy to find free after folks plant in the spring! It should be possible to have it 9-10 months a year! Good luck! (Snowfeet1) wrote in message ... Does anyone have any luck growing this in the house? I live in Texas and even if I plant it outside, the heat dries it up pretty fast. Other herbs last all summer, but not cilantro. |
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