Useful Home Herb Garden Information



Posted: Tuesday, October 27, 2009

by Shad Alan
the Herb Gardening Site

Perhaps surprisingly, the very first step in the creation of a home herb garden is not to design the look and feel of it but to ask yourself why it is that you want to have your own home herb garden.

The purpose of asking why is so that you can come up with a list of all the benefits that you want to receive from your home herb garden. When you have that list of benefits then you can look for the herb plants that can provide those benefits. And when you have written down that list of relevant benefits producing herb plants, then and only then can you proceed with deciding which of those herb plants you have chosen to include in your list of initial plants to grow in your home herb garden.

Generally, the herb plants in your home herb garden are of 3 main categories; annuals, perennials and biennials.

  1. Annuals cannot live through the frost and they die off each year. If you want them again you will have to replant them the following year.
2. Perennials will live through winter to grow again the following year

3. Biennials will spend its first season in growing strong and producing only leaves. It is in the second season that it produces flowers and seeds after which it dies.

I list below a popular choice of each of the above categories of herb plants for your consideration. They include:

If you wish, it is small enough to sit on the windowsill but outdoors it is a great companion plant for peppers and tomatoes by improving their flavour. It makes a mean fly and mosquito repellent and medicinally, basil tea is effective for calming upset tummies and aids in digestive and gas ailments. It is also often used for relieving vomiting, constipation and stomach cramps.

If you want an annual in your home herb garden then basil is an altogether more than worthy candidate.

Chives are of the onion and garlic family and are usually used fresh in salads and soups. Chives are also used in meat dishes.

Being a member of the onion family also means that its use is beneficial for high blood pressure although, because of it size, you would need to consume a lot of it to for it to be effective.

It has attractive yellow flowers that give off a lovely fragrance with a hint of lemon. Its flowers open in the evenings and close in the mornings, and attract bees and butterflies.

The whole plant is edible and it would be healthy to make it a regular part of your meals. This is borne out by the fact that evening primrose capsules are a well-accepted part of a woman's supplementary vitamins.

Its roasted seeds are often used for baking seeded bread.

Why not just make a start at your home herb garden with these three plants and see if you like it.

For guaranteed expert guidance download "Successful Herb Gardening ~ Step-by-Step" 100% risk free. You will be surprised how easy it can be with a simple step-by-step plan.

Shad Alan is an herb gardening enthusiast and owner of the Herb Gardening Site. For more great tips on home herb garden and starting a herb gardening project, visit www.HerbGardeningSite.com the one-stop resource for herb gardening enthusiasts
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Top-level comments on this article: (2 total)
» left by Lorrie Davids
2 years 207 days ago.
96 fans.
I don't think herb gardening is for me, but I did learn some things from your article. Good info.
» left by The Old Gray Mare
2 years 207 days ago.
53 fans. Follow The Old Gray Mare on twitter!
Excellent information with detail. The primrose - must look into that one. You know these plants well and have given a lot of very good information in a "right on target" article. Thank you.
» left by Shad Alan from United Kingdom 2 years 206 days ago.
7 fans.
Thank you so much for your comment which encourages me to continue writing.
 
Hope you like the primrose. It has such pretty yellow flowers.
 
Happy gardening!
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