Italian Dark Green
Parsley
🌱 70d to harvest
Rosette
Aromatic and richly green from the first harvest onward, Italian Dark Green parsley forms dense, finely curled foliage with a vel…
Crop Dates
| Milestone | Date |
|---|---|
| Start Indoors | Direct Sow |
| Last Frost | Feb 9th |
| Transplant / Sow Outdoors | Feb 9th |
| Harvest Begins | Apr 20th |
| Harvest Ends | Dec 9th |
Crop Details
| Trait | Value |
|---|---|
| Days to Maturity | 70 |
| Sun Requirements | Part Sun |
| Growth Habit | Rosette |
| Support Needed | None |
| Planting Depth | Surface |
| Germination Temp (°F) | 70 |
| Min Soil Temp (°F) | 45 |
| Min Night Temp (°F) | 28 |
| Harden Off (days) | Not Required |
Recommended Companions
Frequently Asked Questions
Why are my Italian flat-leaf parsley plants (Petroselinum crispum var. neapolitanum) getting yellow leaves and how can I stop it?
Yellowing with speckling and leaf blight is commonly linked to fungal leaf spots and poor airflow in Apiaceae parsley. Remove and discard the worst leaves, thin crowded plants, water at the soil line (not the foliage), and avoid wetting the canopy. If it keeps spreading, use a garden-safe fungicide labeled for parsley/leafy herbs and repeat according to label timing.
How often should I water Italian flat-leaf parsley during the main growing phase?
Keep the top 1–2 inches of soil consistently evenly moist during establishment and active leaf growth, without letting it stay soggy. In typical home gardens, aim for about 1 inch of water per week split into 1–2 waterings, increasing slightly in heat and decreasing if rainfall is frequent. If leaves wilt during the day and springs back overnight, increase frequency; if stems look limp and soil stays wet, reduce watering and improve drainage.
How do I know when to harvest Italian flat-leaf parsley (Petroselinum crispum var. neapolitanum)?
Harvest when plants have well-developed, flat leaf clusters and are roughly 70 days from sowing, or once individual stems have enough leaves to cut without stripping the crown. For best flavor, start taking outer stems first, cutting 1–2 inches above the soil and leaving the center crown intact to regrow. Avoid harvesting all at once; parsley performs better with frequent, partial cuttings.