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Starting a windowsill herb garden

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onicoe
Captain

PostPosted: Wed May 06, 2009 8:05 am


Courtesy of http://www.gardeningtipsnideas.com/:

Quote:
Growing herbs is a wonderful, and practical, use of your gardening space. They lend themselves so well to almost any garden and emit gorgeous fragrances into the air as well as infuse into your morning cup of herbal tea or throughout your favourite culinary masterpiece.

Yet often the herb garden is kept outdoors and depending on your climate may only be harvestable during the warmer months. So it makes sense to bring them indoors and start your own windowsill herb garden.

STEP #1 - Finding an appropriate windowsill

The best place may seem like the kitchen but it all depends on which windowsill gets the most sun. For southern hemisphereans you will need a window with a north-facing aspect while northerners will need a southerly aspect. A window facing in this direction will get the most sun thoughout the day and produce the much needed light for your herb garden to grow.

The windowsill garden will need at least 4-6 hours of sunlight per day so choose wisely the right windowsill.

If your pots still aren't getting enough warmth from the limited sunlight you may want to consider covering your herbs with a garden cloche. This will create another level of humidity and warmth to keep your plants growing.

STEP #2 - Choosing your windowsill containers

Almost any container will suffice for the windowsill garden provided it won't melt in the sunlight and offers ample drainage. If your winters are very cold I would suggest using terracotta pots instead of plastic as the clay will warm with the sun and insulate the potting medium overnight.

Drainage is an important factor for your windowsill plants so you might want to provide reservoir bowls or saucers under each pot or container. These will also give you some indication as to when your plants require more water.

If your containers don't drain well then they will harm the growth pattern of your herbs and possibly stunt them or allow fungal diseases to be introduced.

STEP #3 - Selecting appropriate windowsill herbs

Just because you've created a windowsill herb garden doesn't mean that any herbs are appropriate. Plants such as fennel, dill and comfrey should all be relegated to the outdoors garden due to their size.

However, this shouldn't limit your options as there are many plants that will grow well indoors on your windowsill. Here are a few;

* Basil
* Oregano
* Marjoram
* Vietnamese Mint
* Borage
* Peppermint
* Tansy
* Chamomile
* Parsley
* Yarrow
* Lemon Thyme
* Coriander (Cilantro)



STEP #4 - Caring for your windowsill garden

Your windowsill garden should be nurtured just the same as your normal outdoor garden. Your herbs will require fertilising throughout their growing season - opt for foliar fertilisers over normal fertilisers although a once-per-year application of a slow-release should give them a boost. They will require fertiliser applications every 4-6 weeks.

As previously mentioned watering is an important component too and should be overseen with some vigour. Too much and you will cause problems and too little may damage these delicate plants beyond repair within a single day. The soil should be just moist to touch and the underlying saucer should have very little water in it passed one day.

To encourage new growth you will also need to prune your windowsill herbs regularly.
PostPosted: Wed May 06, 2009 6:37 pm


Um, I've grown tansy, borage and yarrow. At the moment I have tansy and yarrow outside as they are perennials where I live; when I've had borage in the past it has usually been a reliable reseeding annual.

These get kind of big, especially tansy, for indoors.....
Bonsai herbs, perhaps?

Now rosemary makes a good indoors herb, especially as it is frost-susceptible.

havenne17

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onicoe
Captain

PostPosted: Wed May 06, 2009 7:19 pm


yeah tansy gets HUGE. or at least has the potential for huge-ness.

I've heard that about rosemary, but mine survived the winter just fine and I live in new england. I must be lucky. xd
PostPosted: Thu May 07, 2009 5:06 pm


I have had trouble growing rosemary in the past. I'll have one for awhile and then suddenly it loses its leaves and all I have is a branch in the dirt.

I have never tried overwintering a rosemary outside - just believed what I read and always kept it inside! So you could very well be on to something!

My current plant was sprouted from seed last year and has lived in a south-facing window ever since.

Both the tansy and yarrow grow somewhere on the order of 3 to 5 feet tall but they are both so cute when they are just coming up in the spring, all feathery and light.

havenne17

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Crew

Rainbow Nerd

PostPosted: Wed Jun 10, 2009 7:38 pm


Oh! *jumps up and down* My mother got me a windowsill garden kit for my birthday whee I was sooo excited... It's doing pretty great right now; chives, parsley, and basil in a wide oval pot about 5" deep. I'll eventually have to repot them because the pot they came in doesn't have drainage holes, but they're babies right now so they're happy.

Basil is my favorite plant to grow because it's so easily taken care of where I live.. It loves the Texas sun ^^

I've tried starting mint from seed but never succeeded.. I've heard that it's extremely hard to seed but it grows like crazy if it ever gets going.

My boss's wife had a rosemary bush growing outside her front door... I'm so jealous blaugh It's about 2 feet tall and smells delicious.. They've only lived there three years, and it comes back every year.
PostPosted: Wed Jun 10, 2009 7:53 pm


I love fresh rosemary. I love the smell of it and I love it in breads.

In our new house, the kitchen window gets lots of light and there are shelves on both sides on the window. I've bought seeds and I was going to put them in jiffy pots and then outside, but I might opt to try some inside too. Last time I tried herbs they died a horrible, horrible death. I hope to have better luck with my seeds this time. :3

pirhan
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pirhan
Crew

PostPosted: Thu Jun 11, 2009 3:03 pm


I did lots of stuff today. I had some jiffy pots laying around so I used them to plant some basil and rosemary. Unfortunately I did not have actual pots, so these will have to do for now.

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