A Gardeners Forum
Posted By: RaspberryParfaitDianthus Another question, Cilantro - May 28th, 2006 at 03:43 PM
What do think of Cilantro in a planter outside? It seems to be doing great. I water them every day, so there is a think layer of water and they drink it up. There are 50+ little Cilantro plants. They are about 2 inches tall and only about 3 weeks old, they started from seeds. The clintaro leaves are starting to appear too. smile Is it easy to over water them?
Thanks again! smile This is a cool board.
Posted By: tkhooper Re: Another question, Cilantro - May 28th, 2006 at 09:55 PM
Don't overwater. They like to dry out between waterings. So before you water make sure the first 1/2 inch of soil is dry then water.

Cilantro should be planted in two week increments for use while it is fresh. But maybe you are planning on doing a bunch of drying of the herbs?
Posted By: RaspberryParfaitDianthus Re: Another question, Cilantro - May 29th, 2006 at 05:02 AM
Does that mean they can't be used as fresh herbs? I guess I don't understand what you mean. Do you have uproot the plant? Duh
Posted By: tkhooper Re: Another question, Cilantro - May 29th, 2006 at 09:27 AM
You can definitely use them fresh. I just didn't believe you would need the harvest from 50 plants all at one time. That would make a lot of stuff. I had maybe 4 plants last year and had more than i needed of the cilantro and the coriander so I didn't plant it this year. I will next year but it would have been wasteful to do it this year. I also used it as a trade seed and gave bunches and bunches of it away.
Posted By: RaspberryParfaitDianthus Re: Another question, Cilantro - May 29th, 2006 at 04:10 PM
Oh! LOL I guess I didn't understand. We use a lot of herbs and will probably dry some too. I might give some away. I didn't think THAT many seeds would actually make it!
Posted By: tkhooper Re: Another question, Cilantro - May 30th, 2006 at 01:47 AM
Yep their germination rate is pretty high. Next year you may want to plant some every other week that way you will have it fresh through out the growing season.
Posted By: snapdragon Re: Another question, Cilantro - June 19th, 2006 at 01:12 PM
Welcome RPD and good luck with your cilantro. TK, a question do you have any luck with getting the cilantro to grow stronger stalks? They just always seem so frowsy....
Posted By: tkhooper Re: Another question, Cilantro - June 19th, 2006 at 09:46 PM
Mine were fine and didn't need any additional support. What kind of fertilizer do you use?
Posted By: snapdragon Re: Another question, Cilantro - June 21st, 2006 at 12:55 PM
Since I can't compost or drop a load of manure here (rented property) the only option is store bought.... it's MiracleGro or something along those lines usually. Most places around here don't stock anything more natural. The soil here could use some help...
Posted By: ChristinaC Re: Another question, Cilantro - June 21st, 2006 at 01:11 PM
What is the soil like that your growing the cilantro in? I've never fertilized my cilantro and I've never had that problem.
When you say "frowsy", do you mean it's unedible? Is it still green? Does it still produce a lot of leaves? Or is it discoloured and dried out looking? Remember to pick it as it grows - this will make it produce more and keep it from going to seed.
Posted By: snapdragon Re: Another question, Cilantro - June 25th, 2006 at 03:59 PM
The soil stays fairly moist.... I let it dry out a little between waterings, though when the heavens decide to dump 5 inches on us at a time there's not much I can do. It's not inedible, just not very strong, pretty droopy to be honest. It's green, not too dry, but it slumps in the pot and over the side. It never gets tall enough to produce a lot of leaves... maybe 6-9 inches and then it just kinda putters out.
Posted By: sue099 Re: Another question, Cilantro - July 5th, 2006 at 07:21 AM
unless you want seeds rather than leaves make sure you don't do what I did with mine this spring and let it flower.
As soon as the flower stalks appear (they look different/thicker than the leafy stems) cut them down because once my cilantro started producing flowers on them the leaf production stopped almost overnight.
© A Gardeners Forum [Archive]