I grew up watching my single widowed mother grow a bountiful harvest every single year for at least a decade or more. I know gardening by osmosis. But I still enjoy watching your video and reminiscing about the good old days with my mother. While I sang and made a lot of noise, she worked diligently tending her garden never once complaining about my uselessness. That is a mother's LOVE. And Gardening was simply the best for spending quality time with my mom. Miss her so much. She passed last year. But she is a gentle speaking person just like you. I already subscribed many videos ago but I also enjoy seeing a lot of new comments and subscribers. Channels like this has the most amazing audience and I enjoy them and their wonderful feedback and helpful additional tips as well. Thank you everyone. God bless you all. This is my first season gardening by myself. May the force be with me right. let's see how much knowledge I retained from watching my momma for years!
New sub! I have started saving every single seed from food I buy and grow. It now feels like a waste for even one seed to be thrown in the trash. It's so important to grow your own food
I have a slow bolt cilantro plant that I let go to flower. I planted it in fall of 2022. It is now 5 feet tall with so many flowers and seeds forming. The stalk is at least an inch thick. I can’t wait to collect my seeds. Awesome video. Thank You.
Wow that's some production value at work here. Intro in the thriving garden, coming back in fall to the same shot, going through all the processes in detail.
As a health advocate and avid gardener, I have shared your channel widely for so many of my friends who long to start gardening but know ZERO about it. Thank you for your patient and clear explanations. I happily share your channel!!
I use ground coriander ( cilantro seeds) as one of the seasonings for my split pea and ham soup. I grew cilantro last year and let it go to seed, I harvested some for cooking, the rest self sowed. This years cilantro is now going to seed and I’ll have a much more abundant harvest. Happy gardening
Wow I learned so much from you. Thank you. I never knew that the seeds were coriander. 👍 I cut my celantro and thought it would grow back like my basil. I didn't know what I did wrong. But I have learned.
Thank you so much! I was quite sad cause I left my cilantro to bloom and eventually died, but now I've seen its normal on it, and it means more cilantro 🤯
Wow I learned something else new. I also have an herb garden and love cilantro‘s but I have never let one go to seed so looks like I need to try that this year. Thank you so much for all you have taught me already
Thanks Gardener Scott. My first year growing cilantro. I came to the point of "now what"? Thanks for supplying the answer. I knew cilantro/coriander were two heads of the same coin. Thanks for showing me how to harvest my seeds. This year 3 plants, next year many.
Thanks! Just started a garden this year....this helped immensely, as my cilantro is flowering now😊....now,i will never have to buy cilantro seed again💜💜
Thank you so much for this! I have been growing cilantro for the first time and enjoy it so much. I am excited as I see seeds forming on 3 plants that I let bolt knowing I’ll be able to do it again next year! Also I love seeing your dog. Thank you!
Thank you for this informative video! My cilantro has lots of seeds now and I was gonna start taking them out and dry them under the sun and thought, I should check youtube first! Glad I found your video. I'll wait til they dry and really mature and start planting more cilantro in my patio garden. Thank you so much!
Great video tutorial thank you. Cilantro is an awesome plant. Many of my seeds were feasted on by some little bugs so I chose not to harvest but I witnessed how easy and effective it would be. Thanks for sharing!
Always using coriander when I ferment the pickles, just a few in each jar. And also love the cilantro leaves, although it's hard to find a place in my southern garden where cilantro thrives, because it gets really hot here in the summer. Thank you for the tutorial, helps me replan my garden where I can save a lot of my own seeds just by letting a few of my plants go to seed. Awesome as always
great video. Most importantly you know how old the seeds are. With packed ones you have no idea when they were harvested or if they'll even germinate. I bought seeds this year and had a 15% germination rate vs a 98% on seeds I harvested.
Thank you soooo much! Your video was sooooo easy to follow. You proceeded step by step and explained EVERYTHING. I appreciate it because I knew I wanted to harvest my cilantro seeds but I had NO idea when and how. Thank you!
Very informative, thank you. I live in northern California and my cilantro has just started to bolt. I can't wait to see if the seeds are ready for fall planting. Thanks again.
I started harvesting seeds from flowers this past season but I didn’t do a very good job as I’m an inexperienced gardener. This video really helped me, thank you.
Gardener Scott, thank you so much for presenting your video. It is the best video so far on harvesting coriander seeds, very clearly explained and great demonstration of the techniques you use to harvest and separate seeds from its dried plant. Excellent video!
I'm a new gardener and my cilantro is at that point yours is so i'm heading to the garden now to gather the seeds.I thought they were not good anymore because they looked to dry. Thanks for sharing .I sub'd !
7 grams per plant. I think theres 80 seeds per gram approximately. So 35 grams is 2800 seeds its great feeling when you save those 3 to 4$ packets have 100 to 200 seeds or something ... and if you got excess ammounts grind it up and make coriander powder great feeling 😎 I am letting 9 go to seeds and im doing a fall crop for the leaves. I got this strain called pokey joe the cilantro roots are edible they use them in thai cooking ! Great detailed video !👍
This is a very well put video, and I usually don't like long videos for things I am searching for, but this video was just amazing, and I now have some cilantro growing and now I don't have to buy cilantro seeds for every time I want fresh cilantro, cause the ones at the store don't smell like good cilantro
Thanks, that is helpful. You can also visit, nearby Indian grocery and buy Cilantro seeds ( In Hindi, we call it, Dhaniya) and it will be listed for less than 10$ for 2lb or might be less. Indian use Cilantro Seed powder in cooking.
I am a new COVID-19 gardener and so grateful for your videos. Thank you. What is the best way to store the seeds once I go though the process and am waiting for the next season?
14:38... I know this might sound a bit, foreign,^^ (I'm in Austria) but out here they actually use this seed as a spice, in a LOT of dishes. They call it Coriander and when u hear that in german, it's refering to the seed, they'Re specific when they talk about the leaf and mention it together (Coriander Blatt). Used whole in pickling and cooking (roast, baking) meats. \O>
in Egypt we use coriander seeds in cooking as well .. whole or semicrushed for falafel for example as well as fully crushed for many of the traditional dishes and it is not that cheap .. thank you very much for a wonderful gardening lesson, I'm grateful as ever
Thanks so much for the informative video! I live in Southern California and we have really long dry summers and very mild winters here. My first cilantro plant is already growing seeds now, in early June, and I am hoping to replant the seeds as soon as they are ready (without waiting until next year). Do I need to leave them on the current plant until they dry out if I am planning to replant them immediately?
Not only are you very chill, your dog is very chill too! Thanks for the very helpful video! Mine has been flowering since June as well. Does it help to grow cilantro in containers in a shadier spot to stop from bolting so soon? I've got it in the raised bed in full sunlight.
Thank you for this helpful video! I have a question. Do we need to allow the cilantro plants to completely dry up and die like yours did? I think my cilantro plants are in a space where they will probably stay at least somewhat green through the summer, even if I stop watering them, but I’m hoping the seeds will mature and dry anyway to harvest in the early fall. We are in Northern California (Oakland) and they are in a somewhat shady spot. Thank you for any additional advice.
Hi Scott. My cilantro have flowers on them already and its only mid June. I want to harvest some seeds from them but also want to use the room for other plants. Do I have to wait all the way until fall for the seeds to be ready for picking?
Thanks for the great video! I have one question though: How can I tell if my seeds are mature if I keep watering the plant and they never dry up? I see them on my plant currently, nice and round and green, the size of a BB pellet. They appeared about 3 weeks ago. Should I stop watering and let the plant die and dry out or do I need to keep watering for the seeds to mature longer? (and if so, how much longer?) Thanks in advance!!
Good evening, Gardener Scott. I enjoyed your video and learned quite a bit from it, but I do still have two questions. I know you said you don't really waste your time with the green seeds, but I have a scenario: My cilantro plant started bolting, and being my first year growing this specific herb, I cut the plant out prematurely. So I have a bunch of green seeds. question 1: Can I pluck and dry them into coriander still, or can it only be done by leaving to dry on the vine? question 2: I watched another video of a guy who used his mortar and pestle to crush up the green seeds, and he swore by it saying it's the best part of the whole plant in his opinion! what, if any, is your experience and/or suggestions with the green seeds, if you didn't want to toss them aside?
The green seeds may not be mature enough to save for planting, but they can still be used as a spice. Drying on the plant or after plucking them off will work. The green seeds may have a slightly different coriander taste than you're used to, but is still very good.
@@GardenerScott Thank you for sharing some of your knowledge. I made some tea last night with my leftover stems, leaves, and flowers. With a splash of lemon juice and a teaspoon of sugar, I was pleasantly surprised. Also put some of the green seeds on my salad for lunch. You're right, definitely different than the dried coriander seeds, but still very good! I subscribed to your channel and am looking forward to learning more from you. Enjoy your weekend! Nick
Whole new worlds. Curious when should one stop harvesting the herb for spice/ herb uses and transition to just letting it die for seeds. Just trying to get a feel for when the flavor is going bland is it when you see the flower bloom for most herbs and spices ?
@@GardenerScott nice there is only one issue I am having if I collect the seeds and germenate then/ grow them. I have heard mix talk on the seed may not be as genetically good as the seed packet you originally started with for certain things and I am still a little confused. Open pollinate vs f1 hybrid , vs heirloom varites vs....etc is there away to know what seeds you extract will be as good as the original plant , tree , bush ,.,..etc ????
I agree with tree and bushes it's better to graft on to a root stock then start fresh from seed for cloning but at some point you want to grow root stock from seeds as well as make a totally new tree from seeds. How can you genetically know that the seeds will be superior or inferior...?
Awesome! My cilantro and spinach have bolted about 2 weeks ago! I am excited to harvest seeds a couple months from now! Do you continue to water them as usual or do you allow the soil to dry out?
This is the way to do it. It's not that hard. I get a lot of seeds from just a few plants. And the results after planting are great. I've also just bought coriander seeds as a spice and germinated them...very cheap. I always soak the seeds for a few days before planning and then make sure to keep the soil well watered...cilantro likes water...but it must be well drained.
I live in Goa, India where there is onl really summer and monsoon winter get a few degrees coller but not much else. will coriander just dry out after some time?
Kiko, yes it will dry out in very humid climates, but may take a long time. I would recommend removing the seeds from the plants before the monsoon season begins. You can let them dry out inside on a mat or on a plate. If you let the seeds remain on the plant to dry and they are exposed to heavy rain they can rot.
Thank you for the video. I am wondering if you can remove the cilantro plant after it has flowered, formed the seeds, but is still green, and hang it up to dry, then collect the seeds. Or, do you have to wait for the whole plant to dry in the ground to be able to collect the seeds?
The seeds need to mature on the plant while it's growing to be viable. If you're saving them for the kitchen and not for growing, you can hang and dry.
This feels like a bob ross video.
Relaxing, informative, and binge-worthy.
😌
I came to say the exact same thing!! Definitely the Bob Ross of Gardening!
First time watching and I immediately felt a great vibe, instant subscribe!
Relaxed pup in the background concurs
I grew up watching my single widowed mother grow a bountiful harvest every single year for at least a decade or more. I know gardening by osmosis. But I still enjoy watching your video and reminiscing about the good old days with my mother. While I sang and made a lot of noise, she worked diligently tending her garden never once complaining about my uselessness. That is a mother's LOVE. And Gardening was simply the best for spending quality time with my mom. Miss her so much. She passed last year. But she is a gentle speaking person just like you. I already subscribed many videos ago but I also enjoy seeing a lot of new comments and subscribers. Channels like this has the most amazing audience and I enjoy them and their wonderful feedback and helpful additional tips as well. Thank you everyone. God bless you all. This is my first season gardening by myself. May the force be with me right. let's see how much knowledge I retained from watching my momma for years!
At first I was like...Oh no 16 min video no way. I'm at 15:44 ad I can't stop watching and listening to this guy! Thank you sir.
I remembered to switch to 1.25 speed in settings :-)
Thank you so much! I just pulled out a cilantro plant. I wish I had done this to save myself some money and saved the seeds.
New sub! I have started saving every single seed from food I buy and grow. It now feels like a waste for even one seed to be thrown in the trash. It's so important to grow your own food
Welcome to the channel! I agree. I see each seed as a potential new plant.
Omg it’s the Bob Ross of gardening. I’ve never spent 16 minutes on a video about seeds before but I’m here for it. Truly delightful.
Cilantro is one of my favorite herbs to grow and use for cooking. I'm going to harvest seeds now thanks to your instructions. Thank you and God bless.
I have a slow bolt cilantro plant that I let go to flower. I planted it in fall of 2022. It is now 5 feet tall with so many flowers and seeds forming. The stalk is at least an inch thick. I can’t wait to collect my seeds. Awesome video. Thank You.
You always are so patient and gentle. That's what makes a great teacher. Thank you for sharing your knowledge and wisdom. Now I want to grow it again.
Thanks, Elbert.
Wow that's some production value at work here. Intro in the thriving garden, coming back in fall to the same shot, going through all the processes in detail.
As a health advocate and avid gardener, I have shared your channel widely for so many of my friends who long to start gardening but know ZERO about it. Thank you for your patient and clear explanations. I happily share your channel!!
Thank you very much, Danna. I appreciate the support.
I use ground coriander ( cilantro seeds) as one of the seasonings for my split pea and ham soup. I grew cilantro last year and let it go to seed, I harvested some for cooking, the rest self sowed. This years cilantro is now going to seed and I’ll have a much more abundant harvest. Happy gardening
That sounds delicious. Thanks for sharing.
so seeds will drop and reproduce?
If you smash the dry seeds with a mortar and pestle you get a beautiful spice to go with meat and roast veggies too
Wow I learned so much from you. Thank you. I never knew that the seeds were coriander. 👍 I cut my celantro and thought it would grow back like my basil. I didn't know what I did wrong. But I have learned.
The flowers are just lovely!
You are a great teacher, I enjoy and appreciate the patient and detail that you put when making your videos, thank you so much
That chaff and twig collection is perfect to throw back into the garden
Thank you so much! I was quite sad cause I left my cilantro to bloom and eventually died, but now I've seen its normal on it, and it means more cilantro 🤯
Wow I learned something else new. I also have an herb garden and love cilantro‘s but I have never let one go to seed so looks like I need to try that this year. Thank you so much for all you have taught me already
You're welcome, Lisa. Keep learning. :)
Thanks Gardener Scott. My first year growing cilantro. I came to the point of "now what"? Thanks for supplying the answer. I knew cilantro/coriander were two heads of the same coin. Thanks for showing me how to harvest my seeds. This year 3 plants, next year many.
Wow..... I have just started gardening.... Now with your help I will collect my own corindar seeds.... Thank you
Thanks! Just started a garden this year....this helped immensely, as my cilantro is flowering now😊....now,i will never have to buy cilantro seed again💜💜
Ditto!
Thank you so much for this! I have been growing cilantro for the first time and enjoy it so much. I am excited as I see seeds forming on 3 plants that I let bolt knowing I’ll be able to do it again next year!
Also I love seeing your dog. Thank you!
I'm growing cilantro and so excited to collect the coriander seeds! Thank you Scott, I really appreciate your videos.
Wonderful!
I wish you were my neighbor!
Thank you for this video.
Thank you for this informative video! My cilantro has lots of seeds now and I was gonna start taking them out and dry them under the sun and thought, I should check youtube first! Glad I found your video. I'll wait til they dry and really mature and start planting more cilantro in my patio garden. Thank you so much!
Great video tutorial thank you. Cilantro is an awesome plant. Many of my seeds were feasted on by some little bugs so I chose not to harvest but I witnessed how easy and effective it would be. Thanks for sharing!
I love this I want to learn to garden herbs
This is great 👍
Well done. Yes, I was also surprised to see the price of seeds. I have been collecting seeds from my plants for a long time. Appreciate your advise.
Thanks. Keep on collecting. 🙂
Always using coriander when I ferment the pickles, just a few in each jar. And also love the cilantro leaves, although it's hard to find a place in my southern garden where cilantro thrives, because it gets really hot here in the summer. Thank you for the tutorial, helps me replan my garden where I can save a lot of my own seeds just by letting a few of my plants go to seed. Awesome as always
I love cilantro. Thank you this is helpful.
Thanks for the comment. So glad to share with another cilantro lover. :)
great video. Most importantly you know how old the seeds are. With packed ones you have no idea when they were harvested or if they'll even germinate. I bought seeds this year and had a 15% germination rate vs a 98% on seeds I harvested.
Thank you soooo much! Your video was sooooo easy to follow. You proceeded step by step and explained EVERYTHING. I appreciate it because I knew I wanted to harvest my cilantro seeds but I had NO idea when and how. Thank you!
This was a very relaxing video. My girl just started planting herbs like cilantro and I'm trying to learn some "how to's" things here to help her out.
Love coriander seeds so full of flavour
Very informative, thank you. I live in northern California and my cilantro has just started to bolt. I can't wait to see if the seeds are ready for fall planting. Thanks again.
I started harvesting seeds from flowers this past season but I didn’t do a very good job as I’m an inexperienced gardener. This video really helped me, thank you.
So glad to help.
Thank you! My indoor cilantro recently started to bolt so Im now looking forward to seeds rather than tossing it out.
Thank you Scott, I had never saved the seeds and I plant Cilantro and Coriander..this was a good video indeed..thank you..
Gardener Scott, thank you so much for presenting your video. It is the best video so far on harvesting coriander seeds, very clearly explained and great demonstration of the techniques you use to harvest and separate seeds from its dried plant. Excellent video!
You got a great voice man, so soothing!
Thanks for the in-depth rundown. I planted cilantro in my first gardening run and what little sprouted is stunted so I have just left it for seeds.
Thank you so much for making this video! It really shows the whole process.
I like the video, he is meticulous and knowledgeable, its a good learning experience.
Thank you, Scott! Really terrific lesson.
Great video! Please keep them coming!
Thankyou for this video. Pl. post a video of how to grow coriander from seeds. It will be very helpful.😊 you are my favorite gardener.God bless you.😇
I love to eat cilantro seeds for seasoning
I'm a new gardener and my cilantro is at that point yours is so i'm heading to the garden now to gather the seeds.I thought they were not good anymore because they looked to dry. Thanks for sharing .I sub'd !
Thanks. Welcome to the channel!
7 grams per plant. I think theres 80 seeds per gram approximately. So 35 grams is 2800 seeds its great feeling when you save those 3 to 4$ packets have 100 to 200 seeds or something ... and if you got excess ammounts grind it up and make coriander powder great feeling 😎
I am letting 9 go to seeds and im doing a fall crop for the leaves. I got this strain called pokey joe the cilantro roots are edible they use them in thai cooking !
Great detailed video !👍
Thank you for this very interesting and informative video, I found it extremely useful as I’m preparing to let my cilantro go to seed!
This is a very well put video, and I usually don't like long videos for things I am searching for, but this video was just amazing, and I now have some cilantro growing and now I don't have to buy cilantro seeds for every time I want fresh cilantro, cause the ones at the store don't smell like good cilantro
Thank you for showing how to harvest our own coriander.
Very informative, well illustrated and explained. Thank you.
Thanks. You're welcome.
I need a few weeks vacation so I can watch all of your videos...
Thanks, that is helpful. You can also visit, nearby Indian grocery and buy Cilantro seeds ( In Hindi, we call it, Dhaniya) and it will be listed for less than 10$ for 2lb or might be less. Indian use Cilantro Seed powder in cooking.
Your videos are so helpful!
Thanks great information
I am a new COVID-19 gardener and so grateful for your videos. Thank you. What is the best way to store the seeds once I go though the process and am waiting for the next season?
Store in a cool, dry, dark location. I use glass jars and envelopes.
14:38... I know this might sound a bit, foreign,^^ (I'm in Austria) but out here they actually use this seed as a spice, in a LOT of dishes. They call it Coriander and when u hear that in german, it's refering to the seed, they'Re specific when they talk about the leaf and mention it together (Coriander Blatt). Used whole in pickling and cooking (roast, baking) meats.
\O>
in Egypt we use coriander seeds in cooking as well .. whole or semicrushed for falafel for example as well as fully crushed for many of the traditional dishes and it is not that cheap .. thank you very much for a wonderful gardening lesson, I'm grateful as ever
Thanks. I'm very glad it was helpful.
Thank you so much for this VERY VALUABLE INFORMATION
This was a great lesson on cilantro...thank you very much.
Thank you brother. Very informative.
That was amazing . Thank you for sharing . This really helped me.
Amazing video, Scott!!😍💖💖
This is my first year growing seeds! I loved your video. How long will the dried seeds last if you’re using them for cooking?
I can remember my mum doing this all year round.
I used to watch Bob Ross paint, you give off the same awesome vibe in your videos
Very informative. Thank you.
Thank you Sir, this was very helpful. Missouri Wrightchk
Getting cilantro off the stem is one of those activities you can do while watching TV.
Good idea. Thanks.
Great video thanks!
i will co llect more cilantro seeds. I like too ill them and cook with the coriander. Great seed collection and you get coriander too.
Great video Scott!
Love it! Thx
Thank You for another great video.
I'm glad you liked it. Thanks for the nice comment.
Genious video, I love it and will definitely try saving my own coriander seeds
Go for it!
Coriander is a spice used in Indian cuisine, which is my absolute favorite food.
Your voice kept me drawn in. I did not expect to sit through this.
Coriander has pest management and pollinator and beneficial insect attractor benefits.
Thanks so much for the informative video! I live in Southern California and we have really long dry summers and very mild winters here. My first cilantro plant is already growing seeds now, in early June, and I am hoping to replant the seeds as soon as they are ready (without waiting until next year). Do I need to leave them on the current plant until they dry out if I am planning to replant them immediately?
Wait until they begin to dry to ensure they've matured completely, then you can sow right after that.
I use grinded cilantro with okra in sauce.lightly fry mince garlic, add crushed coriander seeds immediately then add to the okra in sauce
Not only are you very chill, your dog is very chill too! Thanks for the very helpful video! Mine has been flowering since June as well. Does it help to grow cilantro in containers in a shadier spot to stop from bolting so soon? I've got it in the raised bed in full sunlight.
Yes, during the heat of summer some shade can help delay bolting. There are also some slow-bolting varieties available.
Is there a difference between cilantro and coriander??
It is the same plant, though in many areas cilantro refers to the leaves and coriander refers to the seeds.
Thanks so much
Thank you for this helpful video! I have a question. Do we need to allow the cilantro plants to completely dry up and die like yours did? I think my cilantro plants are in a space where they will probably stay at least somewhat green through the summer, even if I stop watering them, but I’m hoping the seeds will mature and dry anyway to harvest in the early fall. We are in Northern California (Oakland) and they are in a somewhat shady spot. Thank you for any additional advice.
The seeds can mature while the plant is still green. You can harvest them when you see them browning.
Hi Scott. My cilantro have flowers on them already and its only mid June. I want to harvest some seeds from them but also want to use the room for other plants. Do I have to wait all the way until fall for the seeds to be ready for picking?
You will need to wait to harvest the seeds, but they provide a lot of seeds so you may only need to keep one or two plants.
Thanks for the great video! I have one question though: How can I tell if my seeds are mature if I keep watering the plant and they never dry up? I see them on my plant currently, nice and round and green, the size of a BB pellet. They appeared about 3 weeks ago. Should I stop watering and let the plant die and dry out or do I need to keep watering for the seeds to mature longer? (and if so, how much longer?) Thanks in advance!!
You can continue watering so the plant is alive as the seeds ripen. When they turn brown you can stop watering.
@@GardenerScott Awesome! Thanks so much, friend! Do you know how long it will take to ripen? Are we talking another week or like 2-3 months? :)
@@gavinator354 The first seeds will probably brown soon and the others will progress over a few weeks.
@@GardenerScott Many thanks again!! :D
Good evening, Gardener Scott. I enjoyed your video and learned quite a bit from it, but I do still have two questions. I know you said you don't really waste your time with the green seeds, but I have a scenario: My cilantro plant started bolting, and being my first year growing this specific herb, I cut the plant out prematurely. So I have a bunch of green seeds. question 1: Can I pluck and dry them into coriander still, or can it only be done by leaving to dry on the vine? question 2: I watched another video of a guy who used his mortar and pestle to crush up the green seeds, and he swore by it saying it's the best part of the whole plant in his opinion! what, if any, is your experience and/or suggestions with the green seeds, if you didn't want to toss them aside?
The green seeds may not be mature enough to save for planting, but they can still be used as a spice. Drying on the plant or after plucking them off will work. The green seeds may have a slightly different coriander taste than you're used to, but is still very good.
@@GardenerScott Thank you for sharing some of your knowledge. I made some tea last night with my leftover stems, leaves, and flowers. With a splash of lemon juice and a teaspoon of sugar, I was pleasantly surprised. Also put some of the green seeds on my salad for lunch. You're right, definitely different than the dried coriander seeds, but still very good! I subscribed to your channel and am looking forward to learning more from you. Enjoy your weekend!
Nick
Thanks Buddy 💯💙🥰✌🏽
Fabulous video. Thank you. Def got the Bob Ross vibes.
Whole new worlds. Curious when should one stop harvesting the herb for spice/ herb uses and transition to just letting it die for seeds. Just trying to get a feel for when the flavor is going bland is it when you see the flower bloom for most herbs and spices ?
Many herbs and plants taste worse when they start setting flowers. That's a good sign.
@@GardenerScott nice there is only one issue I am having if I collect the seeds and germenate then/ grow them. I have heard mix talk on the seed may not be as genetically good as the seed packet you originally started with for certain things and I am still a little confused. Open pollinate vs f1 hybrid , vs heirloom varites vs....etc is there away to know what seeds you extract will be as good as the original plant , tree , bush ,.,..etc ????
I agree with tree and bushes it's better to graft on to a root stock then start fresh from seed for cloning but at some point you want to grow root stock from seeds as well as make a totally new tree from seeds. How can you genetically know that the seeds will be superior or inferior...?
Thank You🙏👌🌿
Awesome! My cilantro and spinach have bolted about 2 weeks ago! I am excited to harvest seeds a couple months from now! Do you continue to water them as usual or do you allow the soil to dry out?
I water as usual to keep the plan alive while it's setting seed.
Gardener Scott thank you so much for your response!
This is the way to do it. It's not that hard. I get a lot of seeds from just a few plants. And the results after planting are great. I've also just bought coriander seeds as a spice and germinated them...very cheap. I always soak the seeds for a few days before planning and then make sure to keep the soil well watered...cilantro likes water...but it must be well drained.
I live in Goa, India where there is onl really summer and monsoon winter get a few degrees coller but not much else. will coriander just dry out after some time?
Kiko, yes it will dry out in very humid climates, but may take a long time. I would recommend removing the seeds from the plants before the monsoon season begins. You can let them dry out inside on a mat or on a plate. If you let the seeds remain on the plant to dry and they are exposed to heavy rain they can rot.
Great video! Would you consider making a video on cooking with coriander seeds?
Thanks! I have a future video planned on cooking with garden herbs and coriander seeds are on my list.
Thank you for the video. I am wondering if you can remove the cilantro plant after it has flowered, formed the seeds, but is still green, and hang it up to dry, then collect the seeds. Or, do you have to wait for the whole plant to dry in the ground to be able to collect the seeds?
The seeds need to mature on the plant while it's growing to be viable. If you're saving them for the kitchen and not for growing, you can hang and dry.
thankx
Thank you