Herbs that are easy to grow
August 19, 2009 by Monica
Filed under Green Household
I love herbs for everyday use. They can be added to a a variety of dishes, provide flavor to home made bread and to make healing drinks.
They´re one of the most useful items to grow in your yard or home. They grow quickly and a quick snip of the scissors brings fresh taste to your recipes and dinner table. Let’s go in detail with these 5 herbs that are easy to grow.
Thyme

In drier climates, Thyme is used as a xeriscape ground cover. This means it requires minimal irrigation and grows like a weed! You can grow them in a container garden, right in the soil, or on your window ledge. Thyme is another one of those herbs that comes in a number of varieties. It’s best to grow it from a cutting rather than directly from a seed because seeds take a long time to cultivate.
photo credit: busbeytheelder
Mint

Mint is delightful in drinks, deserts and in many Middle Eastern dishes. Mint, a perennial, is easy to grow because it really doesn’t care much about the soil it’s planted in. If you’re growing mint outside then take care because it spreads like a weed and can take over your garden or lawn. This makes it a great herb to grow indoors in smaller window ledge containers. Leaves can be harvested as soon as plant reaches six inches.
photo credit: quinn.anya
Basil
There are a number of basil types including spicy Thai Basil and Sweet Basil, which is commonly used in Italian cooking. Basil can be grown either indoors on a sunny window ledge or in your garden once the fear of frost has passed. Place the seeds in the ground per the package directions. The plants can grow up to two feet high which means you’ll want to start thinning them until they’re about six inches apart. Leaves can be picked and used for seasoning when the plants are six weeks old. If you’re going to dry leaves then pick them before the plant’s bloom spikes appear.
photo credit: nathanborror
Dill
Dill grows to about three feet tall and produce yellow flowers, so it fits quite nicely in a flower garden. Both the greens and the seeds from the flowers can be used to season food. The leaves are best harvested before the flowers open. The seeds can be harvested when the flower is open and they’ve ripened. It’s advised to sow them from a seed as transplanting dill plants is difficult. Like Basil, plant seeds after danger of frost has passed.
photo credit: Jochen Laier
Parsley
Parsley, either curly or flat leaf, is another quite versatile herb. It grows quickly and reseeds itself, which means you could end up with a garden full of parsley if you don’t prune and keep an eye on it. Sow from seeds directly into your garden. They’re not choosy about their soil but they do like a lot of sun.
photo credit: quinn.anya
Growing herbs at home is one of the easiest gardening tasks even an amateur can have success at. Many herbs are so easy to grow and practically raise themselves. Whether you garden indoors or out, in containers or in a small plot in your yard, herb growing is a great way to add flavor and fun to your meals year round.
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Excellent article. I love to grow herbs that I use often in cooking. I have to have cilantro for my homemade hot sauce. I recently learned that you can grow your own peppercorns. That is something that I will have to try.
Thanks for your comment, Misty. Cilantro is also very easy to grow, at least it was for me. I’m not a gardening expert but still herbs are so easy and useful for everyone.