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-   -   Dill (http://www.tomatoville.com/showthread.php?t=13333)

VORTREKER February 13, 2010 10:19 PM

After looking at my old notes you can start it at about 60F starting it even earlier.
Planting a fernleaf type will give you another 1-2 weeks
Plant in a tall peat pot so it will allow for the tap root and you can plant the whole thing without disturbing the roots

Katmary June 16, 2010 05:52 AM

I agree about Dill be sensitive to hot heat and bolts easily, but it IS good at coming back! My biggest struggle is aphids LOVE it, to the point that I can't keep them off even spraying them off three times a day. I DID get the shorter kind and grew it in a pot on the deck and it was a bit easier than out in the dirt, plus I could get to it each day to squish the aphids up. If it keeps bolting and it's the leaves you want, let them bolt and go to seed, they'll grow back when the weather's better for them! I get my best in early Fall on since in Spring (I'm by a greenbelt and if I don't kill the weeds going up a hill to my house prior to planting, they'll go straight to my plants!) since there's less to fight.

Chamomile. Dill, and Stevia (add Lemon balm and mint in there too!) are the WORST at keeping aphids away from for long! The first three are like catnip to a cat, it's crazy! And with mints, supposedly the strong smell keeps bugs away?? Not that I've noticed, sheesh!

franzb69 August 17, 2010 06:54 AM

Been having quite a bit of trouble growing it here in my country. Tropical heat isn't something it likes. Trying to grow one out indoors but I don't think it'll help much.

It pretty much gets toasted under the hot sun. And I absolutely love dill pickles. I need dill and I can't get dill here if at all. =(

anyone got tips in growing these things out in my climate? thanks

mjc August 17, 2010 11:31 AM

You have a pretty much year round growing season...so grow it in the coolest, wettest part of the year.

franzb69 August 22, 2010 09:57 PM

i see. thanks. finally found some live dill plants at a local garden center. thanks for the tip.

Worth1 August 23, 2010 12:28 AM

Grasshoppers love dill.:x

Worth

salix August 23, 2010 02:11 AM

Have no trouble growing dill, but as Katmary says the aphids LOVE it. Spent an hour rinsing and salt water soaking the bug(ger)s from a bundle intended for pickles. We garden organically, is there anything other than blasting water from the hose and Safer's soap that is useful?

RinTinTin September 11, 2010 07:51 PM

I have been using ashes from either the fireplace, or BBQ. I dust the aphids with the ash, then come back in a couple of hours and hose off all of the dead aphids. Sometimes, I have to repeat treat in a day or two. I have had near 100% success with that simple, organic method. The ash might slightly raise pH, but is helpful to the soil. Left untreated, aphids will demolish all new growth!

franzb69 September 11, 2010 11:52 PM

The dill i was forced to buy is thrving so far. Lol. Cant seem to start them right so i'll be good with these. My fennel is growing ever so slowly though.

salix September 12, 2010 12:24 AM

Thank you, RinTinTin - will try that next year for sure.

RinTinTin September 12, 2010 12:46 AM

clean, simple, and organic. Since you live in B.C., you probably have a fireplace...if not, I'm sorry to say, but you will HAVE to BBQ more often next year...ooh, the sacrifices we have to make for our plants! lol

nolabelle June 15, 2013 10:41 AM

[QUOTE=salix;181711]Have no trouble growing dill, but as Katmary says the aphids LOVE it. Spent an hour rinsing and salt water soaking the bug(ger)s from a bundle intended for pickles. We garden organically, is there anything other than blasting water from the hose and Safer's soap that is useful?[/QUOTE]

I recently learned that soft bodied insects like aphids can be organically controlled with diatomaceous earth. DE is the fossilized skeletons of algae. When the plants are dusted with DE, insects come in contact and are dehydrated and die. That is the theory. I haven't tried it yet, but I'm currently looking for DE. So far the only place I can find it is aquarium shops. It is used as a filtering medium. I usually don't buy stuff online unless I can't find it locally.

Vespertino June 17, 2013 10:41 PM

Is there a name for the dill that thrives in TX? I've had two failures in a row with dill, they germinated well and grew but the heat nuked them to oblivion, even in the shade!

Dewayne mater June 18, 2013 08:52 AM

If you find it, let me know! I grow it annually, usually putting it out in March, then again in May. I put it in a spot that gets only morning sun. It would be spent already but for the rain the last few days and the accompanying overcast. It doesn't appear to like our heat, but, that is strange considering it grows literally as a weed all over California, where it can be quite hot.

DM

Master_Gardener June 18, 2013 10:50 AM

[QUOTE=nolabelle;356343]I recently learned that soft bodied insects like aphids can be organically controlled with diatomaceous earth. DE is the fossilized skeletons of algae. When the plants are dusted with DE, insects come in contact and are dehydrated and die. That is the theory. I haven't tried it yet, but I'm currently looking for DE. So far the only place I can find it is aquarium shops. It is used as a filtering medium. I usually don't buy stuff online unless I can't find it locally.[/QUOTE]


Do not use the (swimming pool) filter version of DE for lots of reasons, mostly it can be hazardous to you when applying it. You can find DE at garden and feed stores with feed stores likely being the cheaper of the two.


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