digitS'
Garden Master
This could easily be broader than what I have intended. It took me several seasons of growing parsnips to realize that the pretty flowers that grow along the roadways around here are wild parsnips! But, I'm not talking parsnips or carrots, etc..
The word "celery" is derived from the Greek word for "parsley" and it could be okay to reference that. They are fairly close cousins. Probably quite a few of us have parsley. I have started each year and just grow parsley as an annual. It is a biennial but seems to, somehow, pace itself so that folks can have a patch of parsley that will be usable just about year-around. It can just about be left to itself - which is what we did back on the farm.
I have read that some gardeners will dig celery (Apium graveolens var. dulce) and over-winter it in their homes. Do I understand this correctly? What would keep it from just bolting to seed at the beginning of the new season? As best as I understand, it is a biennial.
Turns out, celery grows in a lot of places as an invasive weed . . ! This is news to me but I think I might know the plant well enuf to identify it if it is here and if I am looking for it. I've only grown celery once with very poor success.
What about this Par-Cel (Apium graveolens var. secalinum)? Some people call this "cutting celery" or "parsley celery." It is supposedly a perennial. !! I'm not sure that I knew this when I grew it one year - probably, just pulled the plants if there were any in the spring. It was easy to grow. Was this something I should have kept in my perennial herb plantings? What is your experience with this family of plants?
Steve
The word "celery" is derived from the Greek word for "parsley" and it could be okay to reference that. They are fairly close cousins. Probably quite a few of us have parsley. I have started each year and just grow parsley as an annual. It is a biennial but seems to, somehow, pace itself so that folks can have a patch of parsley that will be usable just about year-around. It can just about be left to itself - which is what we did back on the farm.
I have read that some gardeners will dig celery (Apium graveolens var. dulce) and over-winter it in their homes. Do I understand this correctly? What would keep it from just bolting to seed at the beginning of the new season? As best as I understand, it is a biennial.
Turns out, celery grows in a lot of places as an invasive weed . . ! This is news to me but I think I might know the plant well enuf to identify it if it is here and if I am looking for it. I've only grown celery once with very poor success.
What about this Par-Cel (Apium graveolens var. secalinum)? Some people call this "cutting celery" or "parsley celery." It is supposedly a perennial. !! I'm not sure that I knew this when I grew it one year - probably, just pulled the plants if there were any in the spring. It was easy to grow. Was this something I should have kept in my perennial herb plantings? What is your experience with this family of plants?
Steve