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Your Own Herb Garden

If you don't want to take the effort of managing a fruit or vegetable garden you might still want to have a small herb garden. It is much less work and you can always enjoy fresh herbs to improve your meals with.

 

There is a big variety of herbs available. So when starting you might have a hard time to choose which ones you want to grow. If this happens to you just take a look in your kitchen and see what herbs you already use and start growing these. You don't need to buy them anymore and have the additional benefit of freshness. Over time you will find more herbs you want to grow and you will find how to use them in your meals. The most popular herbs for a private herb garden are basil, rosemary, parsley, chives, sage, mint, lemon balm, dill, bay leaf and a few others.

The soil in your herb garden should have very good drainage. Most of the herbs don't want it too wet. You can achieve this by mixing the soil with some amount of sand or by putting a layer of crushed rocks beneath it or even both. This will prevent moisture accumulation and will help to keep your plants healthy.

You can start with seeds or with little plants from the shop. Most herbs can be grown easily from seeds so you can save some money compared to buying plants. If you are impatient and want to harvest as soon as possible you should start with plants though. Some of the herbs grow very fast (especially mint). It would be wise to plant these in pots with drainage holes because otherwise they will propagate so fast that you might have just that one herb all over your herb garden after a year or two.

Before harvesting parts of your herb plants you should wait until the plants are established well. This will probably be after a few months. If you need to know how to use herbs in your kitchen look into some cookbooks or search for recipes online. Of course the herbs have their best flavor if you use them fresh. Unfortunately in most areas you will not be able to have fresh herbs all over the year. You have to preserve them for winter.

There are different ways to preserve herbs for later use. You can store them in the deep-freezer. Put chives or pasley into a small plastic container and quick-freeze it. Whenever you need something just take as much as you need and return the rest into the freezer again. When the herbs are defrosted they need to be used quickly. Another method is to dry the herbs. Drying is especially good for herbs you use as tea like mint and lemon balm.

You can either hang them on a line in bunches in a dry room for several weeks or put them into the baking oven for two to four hours at 170 degrees Fahrenheit (77 degrees Centigrade). For storing your dried herbs you need an aroma-proof container. Glass is the best material for this. You should regularly check for moisture during the first few days of storage. If there is any you need to dry the herbs again until there is no moisture left in them. Moisture can cause mildew.

If you enjoy fresh herbs in your meals you should start your own herb garden. It certainly requires some amount of work to set it up but after the initial effort there is not much to do but harvesting and drying or freezing your favorite herbs.


 

Gardening Tips News and Information


Gardening Information News

Master Gardeners gear up for growing season - Corvallis Gazette Times


Wilkes Barre Times-Leader

Master Gardeners gear up for growing season
Corvallis Gazette Times
11, at the LaSells Stewart Center, 875 SW 26th St. It will offer practical information to accomplished or aspiring gardeners. Classes include how to grow dahlias and tomatoes, how to eat from your garden all year, designing and managing your own ...
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Master Gardeners Making Donaldson-Bannister Plans - Patch.com


Master Gardeners Making Donaldson-Bannister Plans
Patch.com
Bihm and Hanser both said they would welcome help from any interested gardening clubs or specialty groups such as the rose society. For more information, contact Penny Bihm at psbihm@aol.com. The 2012 Perennial Plant Symposium will be held on Feb.

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No Time to Snooze: Wintertime Gardening Tasks - Patch.com


No Time to Snooze: Wintertime Gardening Tasks
Patch.com
For more information, visit the Missouri Botanical website: www.mobot.org. If you are interested in gardening, learning about gardening or joining a garden club, stop by the Community Association Clubhouse, the second Monday morning of each month and ...

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Planting zones reflect a warmer Nebraska - Lincoln Journal Star


Bloomberg

Planting zones reflect a warmer Nebraska
Lincoln Journal Star
For the first time, the USDA's new plant hardiness zone map is Geographic Information System-based and on the Internet. Gardeners can now examine growing zones at a much finer scale by typing in their zip code. The new map can be found at: ...
New USDA climate zone map reflects northward warming trendsUSA TODAY
New Official US Government Planting Map Puts Ohio in a Warmer ZoneCleveland Leader

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Master Gardener: What's growing on in our soil - San Jose Mercury News


Master Gardener: What's growing on in our soil
San Jose Mercury News
Rebecca Jepsen is a Santa Clara County Master Gardener. The Master Gardener programs are UC Cooperative Extension, county-based volunteer organizations dedicated to providing research-based gardening information to home gardeners.

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Gardening grows children's skills - The Press Association


Gardening grows children's skills
The Press Association
These ranged from gardening-based skills, such as planning, harvesting and using tools, to mentoring and enterprise. Teachers also said that pupils who took part in the RHS sessions retained more information and reinforced what they had learnt in other ...
Gardening helps to grow children's skillsScotsman

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