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Planting, Growing, and Harvesting Celery
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It might depend on how far along the celery is. Are these seedlings, transplants, close to maturity? If they are almost ready to harvest, then it might be OK. If they are young plants, then you might wait a while to see if the plants can recover and grow more leaves—it may delay your harvest a bit, though, and the plants possibly may not be as vigorous. The plants will need leaves to make food for themselves and grow. To protect plants from more hungry bunnies, visit this page for some bunny control options:
http://www.almanac.com/pest/rabbits
Good luck!
I was given a plant that resembles celery but it doesn't bunch into one. It is perennial. Leaves like celery. What is it?
Perhaps it鈥檚 lovage. Has leaves that are similar, is a perennial, and smells strongly of celery. Has way more leaves than stalks.
I believe the plant you may be referring to is lovage. Much like celery, but no no stalks. I love cooking with it.
Your plant is called lovage.
this sounds like ceriac it had a bulb below the soil it is used in soups
It could be Lovage
There is a perennial called Lovage that tastes like celery with leaves similar to celery but it gets tall.
We had "Chinese Celery" in zone 7, perennial; we lost it after 4 years but I don't remember why.
Anyway, it was tougher than regular celery but tasted the same. It was very handy to have celery in the winter garden for cooking soups.
That’s hard to say without seeing it. It’s not rhubarb? Cardoon? Fennel? Hope this gets you started!