Spiral spice garden update

Our spiral herb garden is the highlight of this year’s gardening. You may recall that last year, we built an herb garden at one end of our new patio. The garden did well in year one, so I was curious how it would make out this year.

At the start of the season, pretty much everything was in good shape. Most of the plants came back, even the parsley. The flat leaf parsley had bolted early in the season last year, so it self seeded and gave us lots of plants this year. The curly parsley held on through our mild winter, but we discovered its roots weren’t very sturdy when a close encounter with the hose in the spring knocked it off its stem. My Mom bought us a new parsley. Fitting, since the start of the garden last year was a planter she bought me for Mother’s Day.

She also replaced our basil. This was not a surprise, as it doesn’t survive in our climate. I cut it all off last fall and made it into pesto. The other nonperennial herb for us is rosemary. I’d tried to overwinter it in the house, but was unsuccessful, so I bought a new plant in the spring.

The chives, sage, lemon balm, chamomile, echinacea, milkweed, thyme, oregano and mint all came back happily in the spring and have thrived all summer. Our echinacea has been a bit sleepy since my friend gave it to us, but this year it finally started to spread.

In the case of the mint, it came back too strongly (again, not a surprise), so I dug it up, put it in a pot, and buried the pot in the garden. I did the same when I added another variety of mint that I got from my brother later this summer.

Another new addition this year is dill. I had gathered some seeds from Matt’s Dad’s dill last fall, and a sprinkle in the spring led to a happy clump this summer. I am hoping it will self seed and we will have a bigger clump next year.

The final change this year was some morning glories, which Ellie planted at the centre of the spiral. They’ve been a nice burst of colour in the middle of the garden.

We did have a few failures this year. Our lavender was hanging on in the spring but did not make it. I’ve also tried for several years now to transplant my grandmother’s poppies from my Mom’s house and have not had success.

I am considering removing our milkweed. We are big milkweed fans here for the monarch butterflies. But the milkweed is too tall and too aggressive (it rivals mint) for the herb garden. Due to how it spreads, it will be a chore to eradicate it from the garden, but we have it a lot of other places on the farm.

The garden has turned out to be a big success. It’s super low maintenance and doesn’t need much weeding or watering. I added a fresh layer of woodchips, though there were very few weeds even before that.

Most of the plants have had a thorough haircut at various times throughout the season, as they got so large and unruly. (Except for the massive lemon balm, which Ellie won’t let me cut.) In fact I’ve been able to split lots of them and give them as gifts to people.

I love the big bushy plants and how they drape over the rocks. When we do work in the garden or cut any herbs, they release such beautiful scents. I also love eating the herbs. Having the garden right outside the door is so convenient, so the herbs are used and enjoyed.

It’s amazing to me that this garden has come mostly from gifts, cuttings and transplants. Little sprigs have grown into huge plants, and it’s gratifying to have some gardening success.

What’s been your biggest gardening success this year? Do you have an herb garden at your house? Do you use fresh herbs in your cooking? What’s your favourite herb?

7 thoughts on “Spiral spice garden update

  1. Hi Julia,

    Congratulations on the success you’ve achieved with your herb garden this year !

    I love your story on how it all came about and how it continues to thrive.
    Also, the morning glories Ellie planted are so pretty among the herbs. They are such happy flowers I think.

    Here in our small little garden we planted a single chives plant the first year we moved in. It has done well where we ‘snip’ and ‘enjoy’ it throughout the season (finished for this year). I planted it in a small space at the foot of the deck steps making it very easy to get a cutting when needed. This year I planted Greek basil, which has a smaller leaf that regular basil, but did well in not getting too big in the narrow planter box. Along with it I planted Greek oregano. I was pleased with them both and plan on planting some parsley in another narrow planter box next year. It was very convenient placed on the deck railing in taking cuttings where I used both herbs regularly. I make my avocado own salad dressing where I use both these herbs. I decided to bring the herb planter box indoors for the winter. So far so good.

    I enjoy reading about all your accomplishments on the farm.

    Have a wonderful day.
    Pam[image0.jpeg]
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  2. When we first moved here we found that the deer didn’t bother plants in the flowerbeds right against our house – so all the herbs and a few tomatoes went in there until we fenced a large garden area. Now only the herbs remain in the flowerbeds – so handy for cooking! Lemon thyme is a favorite of mine – just roasted turkey tenderloins on top of a handful of sprigs last night.

    And yeah – basil doesn’t make it through the winter here in NE Alabama either – it didn’t even make it through Orlando winters when we lived in FL. So we just harvest it all before night temps drop under 45F and have caprese salad and make pesto.

    Thanks for sharing.

  3. The spiral herb garden seems very successful! I love the morning glories in the centre. I find it so interesting that the flowers are different colours, depending on how far along they are. So pretty!

    I keep trying to grow herbs in the kitchen window, as it’s many steps down and out to our garden. It simply doesn’t have that proximity factor you were talking about. The one I want most just won’t grow, and that is dill. I don’t know why, but I have no success with it. The others are more modestly successful.

    Something I’d be interested in trying some day in the kitchen is a hydroponic herb garden. I think you can get fairly small ones that produce quite a lot. I have always been interested in hydroponic gardens. Maybe someday I’ll give that a try.

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