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Old 05-08-2011, 06:21 AM #1
Lara Lara is offline
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Confused Parsley gone to seed...

What happens after this herb has seeded? Never had parsley that lasted long enough to seed before, so I don't know.

Do I just save the seeds and dig it out or do I save the seeds and keep chopping it back?

If it's gone to seed does that mean that the plant is spent?
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Old 05-08-2011, 06:53 AM #2
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Hi Lara. Just trim it right back and save the seeds. It should have new sprouts before you know it.

I usually shake the last lot of seeds around my plants as I'm trimming it back. That tends to ensure a healthy growth of new seedlings.

To stop your next lot going to seed, trim it back regualrly, even if you don't want to use it at the time. Any extra, you can dry and save for times like you're experiencing now. Good luck.
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Old 05-08-2011, 07:07 AM #3
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Thanks dear Koala.

Will do!
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Old 09-19-2011, 04:23 AM #4
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Just a p.s.

My parsley is still doing well. I even moved it a couple of weeks back and it's taken just fine. It had an awfully long tap root. Maybe that's because it had gone to seed so vigourously.
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Old 09-19-2011, 07:16 AM #5
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Question

I have 3 huge planters filled with cold intolerant impatiens. One also has a huge purple Persian shield (which is a tropical plant).

Two are mobile one is not. The weather yesterday said temps here are going to be 20 degrees F below normal this week at night. So I have to figure a way to protect them. I'll ask hubby to bring the two up and put in the house, but the other, I'll have to cover. I hope that works. I was hoping to get them thru Oct... which we can do some seasons.

Here is a picture I took in July, when they were small (minus the 3rd planter which I made upNorth, which is long and very bushy too). The Persian shield is in the back and not very tall yet. NOW it is almost 3 ft tall! Getting that planter in the foreground HOME was a trick in and of itself! We lowered it gently into an empty Rubbermaid tote (like the one I linked to earlier in this thread) and the fragile stems just bent upward and were protected. I'll have to remember this trick for the future! The third photo is this planter from vacation on our porch there, and it is now much larger even!

Does anyone recommend a better material for covering? Should it be thick like a tarp? Or will plastic trash bags work?

The second picture is showing a wild coneflower that grew very tall, taller than typically for us. That is hubby standing under it for scale. I guess all the rain we had this year was the reason, and also the decaying bird seed must have fertilized it. This is a type of Rudbeckia that grows along creeks and streams here, and it has a green eye instead of a black/brown one. We were stunned to see it when we returned this summer! The fence is normally at a slant, because we live on a hill... it slopes down from back to front.
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Last edited by mrsD; 11-29-2011 at 07:17 PM.
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Old 09-19-2011, 07:59 AM #6
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Default You have a green-house?

Sorry I can't really give advice for your area. I'm in Sub-tropical zone (south of Tropic of Capricorn).

About the Impatiens...

Impatiens grow really well here, so maybe you could make a hot-house of some kind. They love humidity. They seem a very tropical plant for your region? I'm not sure plants like that can survive your changing temps there?

Maybe organize a green house for those types of plants. Takes up very little room if done correctly.
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