Sunday, January 2, 2011

Vertical Gardening With Herbs



Like vegetables, herbs prefer even moisture and temperature levels, so the creation of a large root mass is key to your success and vertical gardening is the perfect solution for this. Herbs love growing in vertical gardens that have a quality potting mix in them rather than the felt or foam types of green walls, consequently...herbs respond very well in an open tiered, steel vertical gardening system. In addition, due to the increased root space available when compared to the traditional planter methods, many gardeners find that herbs perform better for them in the open tiered, steel vertical gardening system than they ever have for them in pots!

WHICH HERBS?

The varieties of herbs you choose to grow in your vertical garden will depend on your tastes and aspect. If you love the Asian herbs you'll go for coriander, lemon grass and mints. Perhaps your cooking has more of an Italian flavour and you are looking to grow garlic, basil and oregano. Keep in mind that some herbs are perennial and last year after year, others are annuals or biennials and will need to be replaced with seeds or seedlings each year or two. Whichever replanting method you choose, the open tiered, steel vertical gardening system is well suited as you are simply gardening in potting mix - just like you are used to. Plus... using smaller plants or seeds is cheaper so you'll save money while having fun and the satisfaction of growing your own plants from scratch.

ASPECT

If your vertical garden is positioned in hot sun and you have limited water available, plant the tougher Mediterranean type herbs like curry plant, rosemary, sage, oregano and thymes. If your vertical garden has a little more protection and/or increased water storage, you can plant the slightly more tender herbs like coriander, basil, parsley as well.

WARNING

Some herbs are SO vigorous, they can easily swamp out the more tender varieties in your vertical garden. Be warned that planting just about anything in the mint family or lemon balm, is likely to spread and swamp out the other herbs in your vertical garden.

HARVESTING

Whether you are gardening in a vertical garden or not herbs love regular picking to encourage the new, flavoursome, tip growth. The more you pick, the more you get so even if you don't want to eat the herbs, prune regularly to keep the plants vigorous and the supply plentiful.

WATERING

Use rain water or mains water (comply to any restrictions) to keep your soil based, open tiered, vertical garden in perfect condition. Either hand water as needed or use a simple automated dripper system to take care of watering while you are away or if you forget.

Vertical gardening with herbs is deliciously simple, a wonderful activity to share with the grand kids and will give you an attractive, aromatic, year round abundance of culinary joy! Once you've tasted the difference, you'll never return to the musty 'past use by date' dried stuff again. ENJOY.

Emman have been writing articles for nearly 2 years. Come visit his blogs more often for tips and advice that helps people with the interest for landscaping melbourne and great passion and knowledge for landscape design melbourne and all the different options & providers available in the market today. Find out for more info also here acmaintenance.com.au

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