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  • French Tarragon

    Hiya

    I have a lovely french tarragon plant that I bought from a shop looking a bit ill. However, after a couple of weeks of being spoken to (telling it what it's going to be used for ) and watering and sunshine it's looking very very healthy

    I know you can't grow french tarragon from seed so I assume that you can either take a cutting/separate it - which is it?

    can I take a cutting from it and start another plant off? I use tarragon a lot

    thanks x

  • #2
    French tarragon rarely sets seed. It is propagated by division, or from cuttings. Division is best undertaken during the dormant period - autumn or early spring. Carefully cut or gently pull a piece of root apart from the main plant, making sure there is a dormant bud attached. Cut the piece of root to about 8-10cm (3-4in) in length. Put these to root, laid horizontally or vertically, in a well drained organic cuttings mix. Keep them cool but frost-free. Water initially, but keep the compost on the dry rather than wet side.
    Mark

    Vegetable Kingdom blog

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    • #3
      I'm sorry I must be quite thick but I'm not sure I understand what you mean

      cut the roots to 3-4"? how do I then put them to root? in what?

      sorry, I'm new to this

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      • #4
        OK maybe this is easier and what I would do now. Perhaps your plant is still too young to take cuttings from and also it's the wrong time of year. I recommend you let it grow and establish itself into a bigger plant this season and then in autumn or next spring dig it up and split the root and then repot that.
        Mark

        Vegetable Kingdom blog

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        • #5
          thanks

          x

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          • #6
            Cuttings take readily. Why not take 3 or 4 cuttings every week to build up a Tarragon nursery? I use 50% MP compost and 50% sand and put a tennis ball tube over the top of a 3" pot to avoid transpiration. A poly bag will do if you don't have tubes.
            If a thing's worth doing, it's worth doing to excess

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            • #7
              50% sand seems a lot! maybe that's why my other cuttings never really took

              I shall have a go it's so healthy and growing so fast it certainly won't hurt!

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              • #8
                French Tarragon is indestructible, whatever you do to it will probably work.
                Into each life some rain must fall........but this is getting ridiculous.

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                • #9
                  Mine wasn't. I bought a decent sized plant and split it into 3, each had a good bit of root, but 2 out of the 3 died, so I've ended up with one small plant
                  I could not live without a garden, it is my place to unwind and recover, to marvel at the power of all growing things, even weeds!
                  Now a little Shrinking Violet.

                  http://potagerplot.blogspot.com/

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                  • #10
                    I find it quite tender, I've lost quite a few plants in the open (we have free draining soil) I now grow it in a pot and take it into the greenhouse for winter.
                    Mad Old Bat With Attitude.

                    I tried jogging, but I couldn't keep the ice in my glass.

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                    • #11
                      French tarragon is so hardy, killing it off is like killing off mint. Mine survives oputside in a herb box right through the winter, box is about 75 cm square and stays where it is through all the minus 8 and minus 10.

                      If I thin it I just cut rooted pieces off, pot them on and leave them, the mother plant soon fills the gap.
                      TonyF, Dordogne 24220

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                      • #12
                        Originally posted by TonyF View Post
                        French tarragon is so hardy, killing it off is like killing off mint. Mine survives oputside in a herb box right through the winter, box is about 75 cm square and stays where it is through all the minus 8 and minus 10.
                        C'mon TonyF, you can't compare the Dordogne with (in our case) North Staffordshire. French tarragon is most certainly not hardy here.

                        I understand Russian tarragon can be grown from seed, but is much coarser, and inferior in flavour.

                        I got my French tarragon from a reduced price pack in a supermarket. I rooted the cuttings, and have kept it going by splitting for about 10 years.

                        To root the cuttings I would use a 50/50 mix of compost and vermiculite.

                        valmarg

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                        • #13
                          The Dordogne in the winter is really cold, wet and miserable. If North Staffordshire has consistant rain for weeks (well, perhaps it has) and temperatures that regularly hit minus 8 and stay that way for a week, they're comparable cos it's the cold and wet wot does it. OK, summers are much hotter/warmer but many plants here die off in the winter, just the same as they do in the UK.
                          TonyF, Dordogne 24220

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                          • #14
                            Oops sorry TonyF, I assumed anywhere so far south of here as the Dordogne would have milder winters. As OH says, 'It's not very often that you're right missis, but you're wrong again'.

                            I would have to say in mitigation, French tarragon is most definitely not a thug round here. It needs to be carefully nurtured, unlike the real thug - mint.

                            valmarg

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                            • #15
                              I live in the borders of Scotland and my French Tarragon has survived through many winters. The first plant I bought was forgotten about and lived in its pot untended throughout an extremely cold winter - now many of its grandchildren live happily in the garden and in many other gardens too. I love it with mushrooms.

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