Herb

Cilantro / Coriander

Coriandrum sativum · Apiaceae (carrot/parsley family)

Also called: Coriander, Chinese Parsley, Dhania

Cilantro / Coriander (Coriandrum sativum) is a moderate-water herb well suited to Tucson and the low desert. It's a fast-growing herb. Expect white to pale pink blooms spring as temperatures rise.

Cilantro / Coriander (Coriandrum sativum) growing in Tucson
Photo: Franz Eugen Köhler, Köhler's Medizinal-Pflanzen (Public domain) · Wikimedia Commons

Cilantro / Coriander at a glance

Water use
Moderate (established)
Sun
Full sun in the cool season; provide afternoon shade if grown into warm spring weather to slow bolting
Mature size
12-24 in. tall in leaf; up to 2-3 ft when flowering/seeding
Growth rate
Fast
Bloom
White to pale pink, Spring as temperatures rise (bolting); white flower umbels precede coriander seed
Cold hardiness
Cool-season annual; frost-tolerant to light freezes (handles Tucson winter nights), but bolts and dies quickly once temperatures climb above the 80s-90s°F.
Soil
Fertile, well-drained soil rich in organic matter; tolerates Tucson's alkaline soils when amended with compost. Direct-sow, as it resents transplanting (taproot).
Native range
Southern Europe, North Africa, and southwestern Asia (Mediterranean to Middle East)
Best used as
Culinary herb (leaves = cilantro; seeds = coriander spice; Mexican, Asian, Indian cuisine), Cool-season vegetable-garden planting, Pollinator plant when flowering
Wildlife
Flower umbels attract bees, hoverflies, and other beneficial pollinators; foliage may be browsed by rabbits.
Toxicity
Non-toxic and safe for people, dogs, and cats.

How to grow Cilantro / Coriander in Tucson & the low desert

Watering

Keep soil evenly moist; do not let it dry out, which triggers premature bolting. As a fast cool-season annual it needs regular, consistent water throughout its short life.

Fertilizer & nutrients

Light feeder. Amend bed with compost at planting and side-dress once with a balanced fertilizer mid-growth; excess nitrogen reduces flavor. Not a heavy feeder given its short cycle.

Pruning & care

Harvest outer leaves regularly to delay flowering. Once it bolts in spring heat, let it flower and set seed to harvest coriander, or pull and resow.

Notes

Strictly a cool-season crop in Tucson: direct-sow seed October through February (and again briefly in early spring). It will not survive the summer and bolts fast as heat arrives, so make successive sowings every few weeks. Direct-sow rather than transplant because of its sensitive taproot.

Sources: University of Arizona Cooperative Extension / Pima County Master Gardeners; Brad Lancaster Tucson garden planting calendar; thisistucson.com (UA cool-season herb guidance); Missouri Botanical Garden Plant Finder

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