How to Create a Simple Kitchen Herb Garden


Herbs can play a key role in even the smallest of gardens. Whilst some are simply there as decoration, most are fragrant, and far from being imposing so the can easily be used to bring life to those odd corners of a garden that will accommodate little else.

Let us not forget, however, that herbs are enormously healthy, and can bring even the blandest of ingredients to life. Once you have experienced home cooking with fresh herbs that you have just snipped from a ripe branch in your kitchen garden, you will never regard the dried, commercial variety in quite the same way again. You will also be pleasantly surprised how economical fresh herbs and vegetables can be.

Apart from the undeniable satisfaction of growing one's own produce, home herb and vegetable gardening allows you to ensure your cultivation methods are as organic as they can be, which, in turn means that you can dine in the knowledge that all your produce is free from chemicals, and is as healthy as it possibly can be for you and your family.

Assuming that you already have some garden area you can use for herbs, or you can even use containers successfully, there are only fours ingredients you need to cook up a thriving herb garden of your own. Those ingredients are:

(1) A high-quality soil, rich in humus
(2) Sunlight
(3) Regular watering
(4) A little of your time

Now, if you find that your existing soil is unsuitable, you can easily remedy the situation by planting in raised beds, or even more easily, in containers. It depends on how much space you have and how ambitious a herb gardener you wish to become. Simply fill your raised beds or containers with good, organic compost and you are ready to begin planting.

If, on the other hand, you are reclaiming an un-cared for or overgrown garden, try tackling smaller areas at a time. Conquer one area, and once your herbs and vegetables are thriving, move on to another area, and reclaim your land in stages, rather than trying to take on the entire task all at once.

The secret is to start small, no matter how you intend to plant your herb garden. Don't be too over-ambitious, especially if you are a beginner, because you will run the risk of making too many mistakes, and ending up with little to show for it.

First, select herbs that you already know will thrive in your environment. You would be better off choosing the more hardy herbs to start with anyway. Consult a gardening book or visit your local garden center to ascertain which herbs are best for your climate and garden's conditions. Remember to check whether your garden catches a lot of sunlight or whether it is shaded, because this will affect how your plants grow if they are not suited to their growing spots.

Keep it simple at first, and then build up your garden as you gain more and more experience, and in no time you will be enjoying the wonderful flavors and health benefits herbs can afford you and your family for years to come.



Backyard Gardening News

  • Rodale Inc. Promotes Jeff Tkach to Publisher, Organic Gardening
    Rodale Inc. today announced that Jeff Tkach has been promoted to Publisher, Organic Gardening, effective immediately. In his new role, Tkach will lead print and digital advertising sales and marketing efforts across the brand.

  • Sustainability Speaker Series at Johnson County Community College
    Sustainability speaker series looks at organic gardening, trees, drip irrigation and recycling

  • Organic Matter
    Some refuse can go directly into the garden to cycle back into essential nutrients right in place, bypassing the layering and turning of the compost bin.

  • Palo Alto Landscape Design Contractor Green Thumbs Up, Shares Advice on Organic, Sustainable Gardening
    Green Thumbs Up, specializing in eco-friendly gardens, shares techniques to improve the health of a homeowner’s garden and minimize negative impact on the environment.San Francisco, CA (PRWEB) February 03, 2012 A sustainable garden works in harmony with nature. These gardens are low-water, organic, chemical-free, and support environmental conservation. “Sustainable gardens are the trend right ...

  • Explore year-round gardening
    One of the province’s most highly regarded experts on West Coast gardening is coming to the Sunshine Coast next week. Master gardener Linda Gilkeson, author and popular lecturer, will be a guest speaker at a special Gibsons Garden Club event on Tuesday, Feb. 7, at the Heritage Playhouse.

  • Gardening tips for 2012 and beyond
    One day I asked my husband how come he knew so much. "Because I've made more mistakes than other people," he replied. Over the years that remark has stuck with me especially at times when I am pondering my contribution to some disaster and find myself muttering "I'll never do that again!"

  • Gardening Q&A: Smelly growths won't harm garden plants
    Q. I had these really strange looking -- and bad smelling -- growths in a couple of my landscape beds last September. Can you tell me what they are and if they are harmful to people or plants? Can I spray something to get rid of them? A. The writer included some photos of what looked like dog stinkhorns (Mutinus caninus).

  • Winter Gardening Series in Leesport to start soon
    The Penn State Cooperative Extension in Leesport is offering three evening classes on gardening smarts to prepare homeowners for the 2012 season, on the nights of Feb. 13 and 20, and March 5.

  • Gardening classes under way
    January's unusually mild weather has some local folks already thinking spring and looking forward to a new gardening season.

  • Planting a good seed
    IN FOCUS An enterprising foursome is trying to bring the green back into our lives, encouraging an organic way of life, writes VISHNUPRIYA BHANDARAM