Herb Gardening Information
Since ancient times, people have grown herb gardens. Peoples of ancient China and Egypt left written records of their use of herbs. Medieval documents and references within the Bible show people used herbs for perfumes, cloth dyes and medicine as well as cooking. Today, herb gardens are useful for supplying people with herbs for
- cooking
- tea
- medicines
- potpourri
- controlling pests
- other various uses
Herb gardens need not only be for culinary herbs; group plants according to color or group your plantings according to use. Integrate herbs with your existing landscape or mix into your vegetable plantings. You can create a dedicated raised bed planting for your herbs. A plot four feet by six feet is enough to support a small family. Containers of all sizes work well for planting herbs as well. Mix your container-grown herbs with ornamental flowers for beautiful and unique plantings. Grow your herbs right on your windowsill indoors or keep your living plants outside. The place you put them is up to you.
Gardeners new to herbs usually gravitate toward familiar herbs used in cooking, but many herbs are grown for the appearance of their foliage and flowers or for their aromatic properties. Culinary herbs, used in cooking, can be used as flavor-additives or as garnish, and may be used either fresh or dried. The portion of the herb plant used may be the leaves, stems, roots or seeds, depending on the herb and the intended use.
As with other garden and landscape plants, herbs vary from small shrubs to trees, and can be annuals, perennials or biennials. Plant herbs in well-drained soil. Heavy or clay soils will need to have organic mulch mixed in to break up clumps and allow water passage for the herb garden’s roots. Fertilizer is not needed for most herbs. Perennial varieties may appreciate fish fertilizer every other year or a dose of Osmocote.
Full or partial sun is required for most herbs, although some herbs prefer full shade. Group herbs by their sun and water requirements for ease of care. Insect pests and diseases rarely trouble herbs, but aphids can attack herbs such as anise, caraway, dill and fennel. Mint can get rust, and red spider mites can attack low-growing branches of herbs in hot, dry weather.
Grow your herb garden from starts purchased at a nursery, or grow your herbs from seed. Watching an herb plant develop from a single tiny seed can be an empowering experience. While it lives, an annual herb provides your family with taste, smell, sight, texture and emotional experience as well as adding nutrients to your diet. How many garden plants can do all that?
Unlike annual flowers grown for merely for enjoyment of their blossoms, herbs give the herb gardener benefits of scent, sight, taste, and health. A good rule of thumb, when growing herbs from seed, is to bury the seed no deeper than three times its width; for most herbs this will be barely under the surface.
Transplanting seedlings is risky, and some herbs are not suited to this practice. Anise, fennel, dill and coriander prefer to be directly sown where they will grow. Some herbs may be considered noxious weeds and will be listed with the local extension office, so check listings prior to planting medicinal herbs. Your local nursery may have information on this as well.
Herb gardens are easy, fun and rewarding. From a single small pot on the kitchen windowsill to a full herb garden with perennial shrubs regularly harvested, your discovery of herb gardening has just sprouted. You have much to learn and understand about herb gardens before you get started, read on!


