Wednesday, January 8, 2025

How to start and care for an indoor Herb Garden


  
Is it your intention to eat fresher, get healthier in the New Year? An herb garden is a great way to get started toward achieving your goals. There's nothing like harvesting your own herbs fresh from your indoor herb garden. Potted herbs are a great addition to your kitchen during the winter. An indoor herb garden allows you to enjoy the flavor, fragrance, as well as the assurance of quality cooking ingredients year-round.     

 


Growing herbs indoors this winter, you’ll be rewarded with fresh cooking herbs you grow and harvest yourself. Here are some tips to help you grow healthy herbs indoors.  

While temperature and humidity are important, the key factor to growing herbs indoors is light.  Herbs growing indoors need at least six hours of sunlight to thrive. You can grow a wide variety of herbs indoors anywhere they will get at least six hours of sunlight, such as a south or west facing window.  Your other option is to supplement your natural lighting with additional lighting from a fluorescent fixture, LED or an incandescent bulb.




Grow bulbs are available which will fit a standard socket such as a floor lamp or desk lamp. Clamp on light fixtures are also available. This makes it easier to achieve the light you need to grow the herbs indoors successfully. Placing your herb plants in the kitchen or bathroom under grow lights helps ensure they will stay warm and humid naturally.  

  

Providing the right amount of sunlight and the correct ambient temperature encourages the strong, healthy growth of your herb plants and the best tasting foliage.   

 


You can grow herbs from seeds or choose quality herb starter plants. Popular herbs which do well inside are cilantro, oregano, parsley, basil, sage, rosemary, and thyme, but most herbs lend themselves very well to be grown in pots and containers indoors, if there is sufficient light.  



You have many options when it comes to selecting a container for your herb plants. The main consideration is to choose a pot that’s the correct size for the plants you are growing and that it drains. Over-potting herb plants or any plant will lead to root problems. 



Containers made from clay are porous, which means they allow air and moisture to move through the sides of the pot. This helps keep the roots of your plants healthy by preventing overwatering and promoting good air circulation.   




Another option is to combine herbs into a single container. There are many attractive clay or ceramic container options to plant herbs in, just be sure the container has good drainage.   

 


Along with the right sized pot, select a potting soil that drains well, such as Flower Bin Potting Soil.  




Plan to feed your herbs every two weeks with well-balanced fertilizer such as a granular True Organic 4-4-6 or water-soluble 3-2-3. The Organic Material Review Institute – OMRI logo on the package assures you the fertilizer is indeed certified organic.  






Apart from cooking, herbs make great house plants. Pineapple Sage for example, has a pleasant fragrance and will flower.  

 

Growing herbs indoors is a great way to continue gardening right through the dreariest, coldest days of the season. By growing your own culinary herbs indoors, you will be rewarded with fresh cooking herbs you grow and harvest yourself, as well as the color and aroma herbs bring to the table.  

  


 

 

Wednesday, January 1, 2025

Some ideas for your New Year’s gardening resolutions.


  

What are your garden plans for 2025? Making a New Year's resolution for your garden is a great way to start the year with purpose. To that end, here are some ideas: 

  


Resolve to create and maintain a garden journal. Documenting planting dates, weather, successes and failures provides a valuable learning tool to help you develop and hone your gardening knowledge and skills year after year.  Take pictures through the season to help you recall the events logged in your journal.



  


Resolve to develop a plan, put it in writing and follow it. 

 


 

Resolve to improve your garden soil. Not all soils are created equal. They need to be prepared every growing season. 




  

Resolve not to be hesitant to ask questions.  Take advantage of us being here for you; we're happy to help you achieve gardening success. Sign up for our newsletter, read our blog: http://theflowerbincolorado.blogspot.com/ 

 

 


Resolve to not start your tomato and other warm weather crop seeds too early.   

  

When we think of resolutions for 2025, we immediately think of losing weight, being more organized, or quitting smoking. Why not make a resolution for a better gardening experience, including better planning, growing what you’ll eat, attracting pollinators, record keeping, and teaching the kids to plant and care for edibles or flowers.