Anethum graveolens / Dill - Seeds

New product

Quantity: 2400 Bulk Seeds/ per pack

Or

100 grams (approx. 40,000 Seeds)

More details

$US 1.59 tax incl.

More info

Dill is a popular herb in the kitchen, flavoring everything from pickles to fish. Gourmets know that you can’t beat fresh dill for the flavor. The best way to have the very freshest dill possible is by growing dill in your own garden. 

Planting Dill Seed
The best way how to grow dill is directly from seeds rather than from a transplant. Planting dill seed is easy. Dill planting is simply done by scattering the seeds in the desired location after the last frost, then lightly cover the seeds with soil. Water the area thoroughly.

How to grow?

Choose a spot to grow your dill. Dill prefers full sun and rich, well-drained soil. Although dill can grow up to 3 feet tall, its root system is small enough that it can be grown in a pot. A 6-inch diameter pot can hold one or two mature dill plants.

Prepare your soil. Dill can tolerate poor-quality soil, but fertile soil will produce a richer-tasting herb. Amend your soil with organic compost as needed. Before planting dill seed, loosen the soil with a metal rake.

Use a hoe or hand trowel to dig a very shallow trench. In the garden, dill should be planted in rows 12 inches apart. Scatter the seeds in the trench and cover with ¼ inch of soil.

Plant four dill seeds in a 6-inch diameter pot if you are growing dill seeds in a container.

Water thoroughly but gently, so as to not wash the seeds away. Keep moist (but not waterlogged) until germination. Dill seeds should germinate in approximately 7 to 10 days.

Allow sprouts to grow to about 3 inches tall; then thin the row to allow 6 to 9 inches between each plant. In a 6-inch pot, thin the plants down to the two healthiest.

Continue to water as necessary. Dill tolerates drought well, and many herbs improve in flavor if they are allowed to be slightly "thirsty."

Harvest the leaves when the plant is 6 inches high. Once a dill plant puts out a flower, it will stop making leaves, so if you wish to keep harvesting the leaves, pinch back any flower buds that form. If you want the dill plants to form seeds, stop picking the leaves once the flower buds appear. To harvest dill seeds, clip off the seed heads after they have turned brown. Place the seed heads in a paper bag and shake gently to remove the seeds.

30 other products in the same category:

PayPal