New to Herbs...

lnm03

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This is what I bought any tips?? Any advice will be helpful such as planting, harvesting ect...

Anise, Balm, Sweet Basil, Siam Queen Thai Basil, Caraway, Chives, Coriander (Cilantro), Lavender (vera), Sweet Marjoram, Horehound, Parsley (Paramount), Peppermint, Dill, Summer Savory, Thyme, Oregano, Sage and Leek American Flag.

Is it best to plant out side in the garden with the rest of my stuff or should I use individual pots? Do some do better in pots and some in the garden?

Thank you all for any tips!! :D
 

digitS'

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Leslie, this may be of some help:

Growing Herbs in the Home Garden

Anise, I haven't grown anise . . . anise hyssop, might be my favorite tea herb.

Balm, what kind of balm - bee balm? That's a monarda.

Sweet Basil, Siam Queen Thai Basil, find a nice warm place to start the seed and grow the seedlings. Wait until it is nicely warm out of doors to put into the garden. Keep the flowering tops picked off for a longer harvest. You have a "sweet" basil for tomato sauces with one and, as you can imagine, one for Asian noodle soup and such with the other, not-so-sweet. Annuals

Caraway, I've grown sweet fennel, isn't that like caraway? Easy annual.

Chives, you might want to keep it contained but I don't. Easy to start and it is willing to grow in quite a bit of shade. May even do better there since shade delays flowering . . . unless you like the flowers.

Coriander (Cilantro), another annual. Likes it cool and will bolt to seed with the summer heat - you can use the seed as "coriander." The nicest cilantro I grow are those plants left to over-winter in the garden. All in all, I have trouble keeping a steady supply. I understand that it is grown commercially in greenhouses year around.

Lavender (vera), my DW doesn't care about it . . . sometimes, I can't figure out that woman. I don't recall trouble starting it indoors and transplanting.

Sweet Marjoram, grew this for the 1st time last year and didn't come up with any special uses - nice fragrance. I think it would be a bit nicer than oregano in pasta and pizza but I'm much more inclined to use basil than oregano. It is sometimes called "knot marjoram" and that has to do with what it looks like. Don't think it is sick - it's just a kind of small plant that ties itself into knots.

Horehound, some kind of mint . . . ?

Parsley (Paramount), start this every year in the greenhouse. It is a biennial. No real problem, use care when transplanting to protect root. Once you've got this established it will reseed itself just fine if you don't want to start it yourself.

Peppermint, some kind of mint . . . actually, it may just be "mint" since most of these should be propagated by cuttings rather than seed. That's okay, it may be just what you are looking for. Best to keep it contained. It also takes some shade.

Dill, another annual and it will reseed. Start in pots and be very careful setting out or just direct seed it in the garden. Hard to time it perfectly for pickles so you can do 2 things. Cut it and dry it and use that or reseed it every few weeks early in the growing season. Best to do both and use little plants for seasoning this and that in the kitchen.

Summer Savory, I think I've grown this but can't remember . . .

Thyme, I know there are special ones but I don't think that for culinary use there needs to be. Not much of a cook but that's my impression. Find a location where other, taller plants won't smother it. It should pretty much be fine from here on out.

Oregano, I'm not the biggest fan of oregano maybe because I don't have a special variety - don't know. As I said, I'll use basil instead, every time. Grow it like thyme but it probably isn't quite as hardy even if it's taller.

Sage, this one is probably like thyme and the common variety from seed is just fine. Once you've got it, you shouldn't have much trouble keeping it.

Leek American Flag, I like leeks but I've grown this variety twice (probably out of a misplaced sense of patriotism). It didn't compare well, at all, to Lancelot even if that makes me sound like someone who wears tights and frolics about in Camelot.

Steve
 

lnm03

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Thanks Steve!! I appreciate all the info!!

;) :thumbsup
 

momofdrew

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most mints should be grown in large pots in the ground with the rim above ground they can be invasive but great for summer iced teas

Oregano loves full sun and will reseed itself... the butterflies love the blooms...can be invasive I have it in one plot all by itself now next tothe house so it gets lots of heat and has nowhere to go...I use mine fresh and dried

sage likes to be cut back in the fall it will get bushy I have mine close tothe house so I can even pick some leaves in December for Chirstmas turkey stuffing

chive keep the flowers cut back before they set seed or they will produce more then you could ever use...

Thyme has many flavors most common is lemon basil great for salad dressing easy to grow doesnot like cold winters so mulch in fall

Lavender also needs mulching ask your greenhouse which kind is best for your area...I love lavender... you can use it in cooking as well as dried for your linen closet
 

vfem

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I am new to herbs too.... basil is my most common of them I have used and grow because it does well inside in the winter for me. I'm hoping to find some thyme, dill, sage, rosemary as well.... I really want to keep my herbs in pots on my deck. Easy to get to when I need them... right outside my kitchen door! :)

I wish you luck, you've gotten a lot of good advice.
 

RustyHart

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I keep several herbs and work for an Herb farm....mints are my favorites....I keep 8 varieites.....and tons of Dahlias
 

setter4

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I don't think anyone mentioned rosemary. That's the only one I have planted in the house right now. It said to start inside 8-10 weeks before last frost. All the rest say to sew outside when the ground warms up.
 

vfem

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Well, I did kinda have rosemary... Beavis sent it to me back in January. The clipping never took though and died... some quickly and the last few dried out and were tossed away about 2 weeks ago.

I want to have a BUNCH of pots on the deck just for herbs.

I have English Munstead Lavender to trade for some cuttings or seeds or whatever.

I have a longer list in the BST area.
 

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