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Herb Garden PDF Print E-mail
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Written by Administrator   
Wednesday, 18 October 2006

Nothing makes food taste better than fresh herbs and spices.  The freshest herbs and spices possible come from your own backyard herb garden. 

Many herbs and spices are quite simple to grow and make attractive plants. 

flowering oregano pretty and tasty

Flowering oregano is pretty and tasty.

Care should be taken because some herbs and spices are invasive plants

 

 

Click here for a list of the many herbs and spices you might include in your herb garden. 

peppermint should be grown in pots because it can be an invasive plant.

Peppermint should be grown in pots because it can be an invasive plant. 

 

A herb garden is a garden specifically designed and used for the cultivation of cooking and/or medicinal herbs.

Herb gardens developed from the general gardens of the ancient classical worlds, used for growing vegetables, flowers, fruits and medicines. During the medieval period monks and nuns acquired specialist medical knowledge and grew the necessary herbs in specialist gardens. Typical plants were rosemary, parsley, sage, marjoram, thyme, mint, rue, angelica, bay and basil. With the advance of medical and botanical sciences in Renaissance Europe, monastic herb gardens developed into botanical gardens. The section in which herbs was grown became known as a Garden of Simples.

Herb gardens experienced a revival with the work of the British garden historian and horticultural, writer Eleanour Sinclair Rohde (1882-1950). Modern herb gardens may be purely functional or may be ornamental, sometimes as part of a design and containing boxes and raised beds. The development of alternative medicine is also encouraging people to grow and use fresh herbs (eg for the treatment of acne).

 

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia 

Last Updated ( Wednesday, 18 October 2006 )
 
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