Herbs are an integral part of summer cooking. A novel and handy way to bring the herb garden to the patio is to pot up a centrepiece for the table. This planter is fragrant and decorative – and your guests can harvest fresh herbs themselves, using the handy scissors you provide.
Making a summer herb planter is easy. The container can be anything you choose; the only requirements are that it have drainage and be a minimum of 30 cm (12 in.) across and 7.5 cm (3 in.) deep. It could be an old tin bucket, a piece of pottery, a plastic-lined wicker basket, an old birdbath (simply drill some holes) or a homemade tufa planter.
Fill the container loosely with a sterilized potting soil with added organic nutrients – 20 per cent compost will do. Choose five of your favourite culinary herbs. Tuck the tallest-growing herb into the centre and place the other four around it. If your planter is large enough, add some colourful edible flowers, such as pansies or nasturtiums.
Top-dress with a slow-release organic fertilizer and water the planter.
The only care your planter will require is regular watering and feeding with a liquid organic fertilizer every two weeks. Place it in the centre of your table, attach a small pair of scissors and watch your portable herbal centrepiece grow and your guests enjoy.
When summer is over, remove faded annuals and bring your garden indoors near a bright, south-facing window, to provide the taste of fresh herbs all winter long.
HERBAL CENTERPIECE COMBINATIONS
All-Purpose Evergreen Centre – Colourful sage, such as tri-colour or purple
Surround with silver thyme, creeping rosemary, lemon thyme and chives. In summer, squeeze in a ‘Purple Ruffles’ basil and a few purple pansies.
Italian Centre – Tuscan blue rosemary
Surround with Italian parsley, golden oregano, Spanish thyme and purple sage. In summer, nestle in a sweet basil plant and a few nasturtiums.
French Centre – French lavender ‘Provence’ or ‘Grosso’
Surround with chervil, French tarragon, silver thyme and creeping rosemary. In summer, fill in any bare spots with curly parsley.
Lemon-Herb Centre – Lemon grass
Surround with lemon lavender, lemon thyme, lemon balm and lemon mint. In summer, nestle in a plant or two of lemon basil.
Mighty Mint Centre – Spearmint
Surround with lemon mint, chocolate mint, licorice mint and grapefruit mint.
Comments
I have a package of Candy Tuft, and wondering if
May 9, 2008 at 02:31this can be seeded right into the garden, or should I
start the seeds in the greenhouse, using small
starting containers..?
I have lots of compost, and topsoil, peat moss, and
should this be mixed together for the seeding?
Thank you for any help.
Response from Sheena Adams:
You may sow your seed indoors or directly in the garden. To save transplanting I would suggest just simply sowing it outdoors. Top dress your desired locations with your compost and peat moss, sow your seed and water in. They should come on quite fast for you, however your blooms may be delayed until next spring.
thanks and happy gardening!
Sheena
May 12, 2008 at 11:05Anonymous comments are welcome, but they must first go to an approval queue. Register here to join our online community, and then login to start posting immediately.