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How would i arrange a working herb garden ??

By admin | April 5, 2010

i have an allotment and i used a part of it for my herbs. unfortunately as my herbs grew they have all mixed in together like a gigantic herbal jungle, and although i’ve cut them back.i can’t quite decide where one plant ends and another begins. can they be left in a herbal mass…or are they better grown singularly with lots of care ??? thanks

Topics: Herb Gardening | 5 Comments »

5 Responses to “How would i arrange a working herb garden ??”

  1. GreenDragonHerbals.com Says:
    April 5th, 2010 at 8:10 pm

    Creeping thyme is gorgeous spilling out of an old pot, and rosemary can get tall enough to shield your view. While you ‘could’ grow each of them in pots – I prefer the more natural look.

    If you let even ONE of those plants go to seed – you’ll have more herbs next year than you can shake a stick at – and they’ll be everywhere, certainly not orderly.

    I personally don’t think an herb garden should be neat. It should reflect nature…..

    ~J~ (who’s parsley is currently home to some caterpillars destined to be gorgeous butterflies)

  2. coffee Says:
    April 5th, 2010 at 8:10 pm

    To keep them separate sink large flower pots/buckets/or troughs with the base cut out sunk into the earth. Nothing wrong with a herb jungle though.

  3. Rangarajan R Says:
    April 5th, 2010 at 8:10 pm

    1.www.blessedmaineherbs.com
    2.utahmastergardeners.usu.edu/counties
    3.www.histery.uk.com/herb-garden
    4.www.hilakas.com/live-and-learn-info
    5.www.43things.com/things

  4. John R Says:
    April 5th, 2010 at 8:10 pm

    It’s difficult to keep many herbs from spreading; I used to try to separate mine into approximate areas – mints, thymes, tall herbs like chamomile and such, etc. The separating devices can be as simple as you like – I used to use brick walkways, but when space is tight, those plastice edging strips might work OK. The problem with a mass is that some, like mints, will overgrow the others. If they’re all lowish it’s less of a problem.

  5. Moey Says:
    April 5th, 2010 at 8:10 pm

    I let mine grow pretty much in the natural and would be so happy to have that problem this year. Right here where I live we had a big freeze in late spring that killed everything, so this year, no peaches, no figs, no herbs exept for a few that grew slowly and poorly after they came back. But I have been grateful everytime I think about that because some farmers lost their entire crop this year. I just hope they have found some other way to make it through to next year. I have about 15 different ones so I am not hurting, good luck with your garden.

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