An herb garden located close to the house gives you easy access to flavour-enhancing herbs, as well as many useful medicinal ingredients. An open window is all it takes to fill your home with the refreshing scent of growing herbs.
June 30, 2015
An herb garden located close to the house gives you easy access to flavour-enhancing herbs, as well as many useful medicinal ingredients. An open window is all it takes to fill your home with the refreshing scent of growing herbs.
It needs a sunny area with loose, permanent soil. Raised spiral herb gardens, built with rocks and soil, have been used for many generations to get maximum productivity out of small spaces. Two additional bonuses: they tend to suffer from significantly fewer pests, and the garden is accessible from all sides. The basic design calls for a spiral or knot of rocks, enclosing soil in which many species of herbs are planted. The rocks warm and humidify the soil, and the design allows for a wide variety of soil conditions.
Tip: Only natural fertilizers should be used in an herb bed — if any are used at all. The plants lose flavour if they get too much of a good thing. A little compost worked into the soil is all they need.
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