Growing Tarragon in a Greenhouse:
What I Learned About PAR, CO₂, and VPD at Each Growth Stage
Tarragon looks like a simple herb, but growing it well in a greenhouse taught me a lesson I didn’t expect:
tarragon hates extremes.
I initially treated it like basil and rosemary — pushing light and drying the air — and the plants clearly pushed back. Growth slowed, leaves stiffened, and aroma weakened. Only after dialing things back and paying closer attention to PAR, CO₂, and especially VPD did tarragon start behaving like the elegant herb it’s known to be.
Here’s what I learned from actually growing it, stage by stage.
- Establishment & Early Growth
(Where I made my first mistake)
When young tarragon plants first established, I assumed they would appreciate strong light. They didn’t.
What I saw instead:
slow root establishment
thin, stressed leaves
uneven growth across the tray
What finally worked:
PAR: 100–180 µmol·m⁻²·s⁻¹
DLI: ~5–8
CO₂: 400–600 ppm
VPD: 0.6–1.0 kPa
Temperature: 18–22 °C
Why this matters:
At this stage, tarragon is far more sensitive to water balance than light availability.
If VPD drifts too high, leaves lose moisture faster than the roots can support.
Once I softened the light and stabilized humidity, growth immediately became more uniform.
- Early Leaf Expansion
(Where CO₂ starts to matter — quietly)
As leaf area increased, I noticed something subtle: growth speed didn’t improve just by increasing light, but it did respond when CO₂ rose slightly — as long as humidity stayed stable.
Conditions that gave consistent results:
PAR: 180–300 µmol·m⁻²·s⁻¹
DLI: 8–12
CO₂: 600–800 ppm
VPD: 0.8–1.2 kPa
Temperature: 18–24 °C
What I observed:
leaves became broader, not longer
stems stayed flexible, not woody
aroma developed slowly but cleanly
Pushing PAR higher at this stage didn’t help — it actually stressed the plants.
- Main Vegetative Growth
(Where balance matters more than power)
This is the phase where I expected tarragon to behave like other herbs and reward higher light levels. It didn’t.
When PAR went too high:
leaf texture hardened
aroma flattened
growth became uneven
The sweet spot I settled on:
PAR: 250–400 µmol·m⁻²·s⁻¹
DLI: 10–14
CO₂: 800–1000 ppm
VPD: 1.0–1.4 kPa
Temperature: 20–26 °C
Key realization:
Tarragon is not a “push crop.”
It grows best when nothing is extreme — not light, not CO₂, not dryness.
Once PAR, CO₂, and VPD were aligned, growth became steady and predictable rather than fast-and-fragile.
- Pre-Harvest & Aroma Preservation
(The difference between “green” and “fragrant”)
Before harvest, I stopped chasing growth speed and focused on leaf quality.
What gave the best results:
PAR: 200–350 µmol·m⁻²·s⁻¹
DLI: 8–12
CO₂: 700–900 ppm
VPD: 1.2–1.6 kPa
Temperature: 18–22 °C
What changed:
aroma became more distinct and refined
leaves stayed tender
post-harvest quality improved noticeably
Too much humidity dulled aroma.
Too much dryness stiffened leaves.
How PAR, CO₂, and VPD Actually Interact for Tarragon
From repeated cycles, one thing became very clear to me:
High PAR does not equal better tarragon
CO₂ helps, but only within a narrow comfort zone
VPD is the silent limiter most people overlook
In practice:
High PAR + high VPD → stressed, flavorless leaves
High CO₂ + low PAR → wasted enrichment
Balanced PAR + moderate CO₂ + stable VPD → consistent, aromatic growth
Practical Lessons I Took Away
Tarragon prefers moderation, not intensity
It tolerates less light than basil and rosemary
It dislikes dry air more than thyme or oregano
CO₂ enrichment works, but only when everything else is calm
Measuring light alone gives an incomplete picture
VPD stability matters more than chasing ideal numbers
Final Thoughts
Growing tarragon taught me that “stronger” is not always “better” in a greenhouse.
The biggest improvement didn’t come from new equipment or higher settings — it came from listening to how the plant responded and adjusting PAR, CO₂, and VPD together instead of in isolation.
Once I stopped forcing growth and started managing balance, tarragon finally grew the way it’s meant to:
slow, aromatic, and elegant.
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