Questions tagged [bolting]

When a plant produces an unwanted flower head immediately before dieing.

Many and are grown for their or bulbs. Often they will die shortly after producing a head and . The process of putting out this final flower head is known as . Ideally these plants should be grown for as long as possible before this happens. Example plants that can bolt include and onions.

Usually is caused by poor growing conditions (eg. too dry or too hot). The plant senses that it is going to die, and in one "last gasp" produces a flower so that its genes will survive to the next generation.

Use this tag for questions about how to avoid in specific plants. is a common problem with specific plants, so the chances are your question has already been asked: Be sure to search the site first before asking a potentially duplicate question.

15 questions
34
votes
8 answers

My lettuce is flowering - does that mean it has bolted?

I planted a batch of "zesty blend" lettuce seeds. They seem to be doing fine, but suddenly they started flowering: Have they bolted? They look healthy otherwise. Still edible?
Caffeine Coma
  • 977
  • 1
  • 8
  • 15
28
votes
2 answers

How do you discourage cilantro/coriander from bolting too quickly?

What techniques can be used to discourage cilantro from bolting too quickly? I plant them and it seems that they almost immediately go to seed after they've reached maturity.
Michael Todd
  • 2,282
  • 1
  • 20
  • 22
17
votes
1 answer

How do I encourage my Florence fennel to produce fat bulbs?

I have some Florence fennel in my garden that tends to grow very fast in height and to make flowers, but the base stays relatively thin. What should I do to encourage the growth of a "fat" bulb in order to have a better harvest? Does it help to cut…
bangnab
  • 578
  • 3
  • 6
16
votes
1 answer

Why does one of my onion varieties (Red Baron) invariably bolt?

I plant onion sets every spring and, with the exception of Red Baron, they all flourish. The Red Baron variety invariably bolt in early summer, although they are planted and fed in exactly the same way as the other varieties I'm successfully growing…
Mancuniensis
  • 14,224
  • 1
  • 48
  • 85
11
votes
3 answers

Why is my spinach flowering and how can I prevent it?

It is an unusually warm year in Minnesota. I planted two rows of spinach around April 15th. Now (end of May) I have two rows of spinach about 2 inches tall, and it all started flowering. Is it now inedible because of the flowering? How do I prevent…
dfrankow
  • 369
  • 2
  • 4
  • 7
9
votes
1 answer

What about covering lettuces during hot periods?

This question reminds us that lettuces don't like too much hot weather. To look after my lettuce crop and guard against bolting, might it be worth covering the lettuce with, say, layers of damp newspaper for short spells during very hot weather?
Tea Drinker
  • 9,513
  • 12
  • 47
  • 113
7
votes
2 answers

Will cutting a bolted lettuce plant allow it to regrow?

I'm a novice gardener and my lettuce has bolted. Do I have to remove the entire plant from the ground or can I just cut it down to the ground so it can regrow?
user2347
  • 71
  • 1
  • 2
7
votes
1 answer

Can I save this crop of broccoli that bolted early?

We've been having a yo-yo spring (temperature-wise) here in Central Texas and our Packman Hybrid broccoli, which is in a raised bed and kept under a plastic frame on cold days, just decided to bolt. I'm guessing that when it got warmer yesterday and…
Catija
  • 191
  • 1
  • 3
  • 10
6
votes
1 answer

Is spinach which has bolted as unusable as bolted lettuce?

Bolted lettuce is famously unusable because your sweet salad leaves turn bitter. But does the same apply to spinach? It's a lettuce type crop (and equally prone to bolting in hot weather) but it's basically a bitter leaf anyway and typically cooked…
Tea Drinker
  • 9,513
  • 12
  • 47
  • 113
6
votes
1 answer

Should I cut off the stems of my bolting pak choi?

My whole pak choi spring harvest is bolting right now (I sowed in a green house very early to get a second one in if need be). However I read that with pak choi when the plant is bolting it usually does not turn as bitter as other plants. I also…
Hans
  • 161
  • 1
  • 3
6
votes
1 answer

Controlling Coriander/Cilantro

Possible Duplicate: How do you discourage cilantro from bolting too quickly? I have a Coriander plant that I think is bolting. It started flowering and got quite tall.Most of the standard coriander leaves have gone, and have been replaced by…
Dan
  • 4,351
  • 8
  • 33
  • 50
4
votes
1 answer

How can I regulate lettuce indoors so it doesn't bolt/flower?

Is there a science to regulating lettuce indoors in a way that prevents or minimizes bolting/flowering?
Enigma
  • 1,993
  • 5
  • 21
  • 40
3
votes
2 answers

Is there any way to know what you're getting when you plant seeds collected from hybrid plants?

I collected a whole bunch of broccoli seeds last year. I think they were packman hybrid broccoli. This year my 'broccoli' grew prolifically, but bolted exceptionally quick. I thought I had planted kale instead. But then I remembered the source of…
Peter Turner
  • 9,141
  • 5
  • 37
  • 83
3
votes
1 answer

Eating rhubarb after it's bolted

I had a surprise rhubarb plant pop up 2 years after moving into my house, and was looking forward to harvesting it until it started flowering. I've heard that bolting can affect the taste of lettuce for the worse (though I've never tested that…
miken32
  • 133
  • 4
2
votes
1 answer

Can you transplant a bolted plant and still get viable seeds?

I have a few plants in my raised beds (mostly broccoli and beets) that are bolting and producing seeds, but not ready to collect them yet. I need the space for some new seedlings, and I don't know if I could transplant the bolting plants somewhere…
csamx
  • 109
  • 4