Author Topic: Growing Pre bought coriander  (Read 8866 times)

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Offline thewhiterabbit

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Re: Growing Pre bought coriander
« Reply #10 on: June 25, 2014, 08:34 PM »
I've been growing coriander, basil and thai basil this year...

Coriander - best thing to do is to lightly crush the seeds before sowing. The thing we think is a seed is actually the fruit, the seeds are inside it so you'll get better germination if you crush the pod slightly.

Sow a few seeds in a small pot with moist compost (multi purpose is fine). Cover with cling film to retain the moisture and leave somewhere warm.

Once the seeds have germinated, move them to a light position...direct sun is ok while they're growing as long as they don't get too hot. Once they're a reasonable size and have some proper leaves, it's best to plant them out.

When you plant them out, put them in well draining soil, grit, compost mix. Ideally in a shaded but warm spot... the morning or afternoon sun directly is great as it's not too hot then. When planting out, don't mess with the roots too much, they don't appreciate being messed with.

Cut regularly to encourage new growth. They tend to bolt (go to seed) quickly if they get too hot or too dry.

Calypso is a cut and come again leafing variety so well suited to what we're after!

Offline macferret

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Re: Growing Pre bought coriander
« Reply #11 on: June 25, 2014, 11:27 PM »
Hi,
I buy basil seedlings in pots from the supermarket and break them up to plant on - cheap and easy.
But I agree that this would work less well for coriander, which doesn't like being transplanted.
You can get a variety of coriander called Slow Bolt. We started growing it about 10 years ago, and it self-seeds now all over the place.  Trouble is, the slow-bolt characteristic wears off, and soon you have plants that produce very little leaf and go straight to seed.  To avoid that, we only keep the seed from plants that bolt very late on.
One word of warning...I went away last year for work, and didn't grow any coriander. I tried planting the 2-year-old seed this year and it was all dud. I doesn't keep well. So I had to order more Slow Bolt and start the whole process again.
Cheers,
Tim

 

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