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Indoor Window Sill Herb Garden Articles & Resources

 

A winter home for herbs - starting a window sill garden

Craig Summers Black

START A WINDOWSILL HERB GARDEN AND YOU CAN GARDEN ALL WINTER--AND GARDEN IN DARING EVENING WEAR OR COMFY PJ'S IF YOU LIKE. YOU WILL EAT BETTER AND EVEN SAVE MONEY BY GROWING HERBS INDOORS, BECAUSE FRESH INGREDIENTS FOR YOUR COLD-WEATHER COOKING COST NEXT TO NOTHING.

create a sun space

Even if you don't have an space herb garden outdoors, you can start from scratch indoors despite the fact that icy weather is starting to threaten.

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It's not too late to buy. In many areas of the country, prices are being slashed on the last lonely herbs in garden centers. If your local nurseries are already shuttered for the season, you can make a quick call to mail-order nurseries and have them ship you a selection. Do make sure they are astute enough not to send your new garden out the door just as a sudden spell of particularly nasty weather strikes.

We suggest you go with these five herbs: oregano, chives, mint, rosemary, and thyme. Most cooks use them on a regular basis, and they will actually make it through the winter in your indoor garden. If you're lucky, you can even harden them off and plant them outdoors come spring.

A caution about selecting your herbs: Just because you like to cook with a particular ingredient doesn't mean you can grow that plant indoors. As much as you may love basil, for instance, this herb turns into a sorry specimen after a few weeks cooped up inside.

digging perfect pots

You will need to pot up some smallish-sized herb plants because the containers need to fit on a windowsill. Four-inch pots work nicely.

Remember to use pots with drainage holes so your herbs don't rot. And that means the pots need to rest in saucers, which--if you are eyeing the width of your sill right now--will be a little wider than the pots. So you need at least a 5-inch windowsill We like terra-cotta pots, but they do dry out quickly in winter's heated indoor "weather," and the saucers leak. Use a plastic liner or rubber pad.

1 To pot up your new herbs, lay down only a very few pebbles or packing "peanuts" over the drain hole. In such small posts, the herbs need all the root room they can get. Then fill the bottom one-third or so of the pot with potting soil. Use the plastic nursery container (with the plant still in it) to check the soil level.

2 At this point you can just pull the herb out of its original nursery container and place it on the soil. But here's a neat trick: Put the herb--while it is still in its nursery container--in your windowsill pot and fill with potting soil. You read that right: You now have a pot within a pot. It gets less confusing.

3 Press down the soil between the rims of the two pots with a thick dowel or your fingertips. Add more soil as needed. Do not press down the soil in the plastic nursery container. Still with us?

4 Now carefully remove the nursery container (and plant) from your windowsill pot. There will remain a perfectly formed hole in the center of the terra-cotta pot. I think you already know what's coming.

5 Right. You take the herb out of the plastic nursery container and place it in the dark void at the center of your terra-cotta pot. It fits! Now water the soil and get growing.

replant the outside

Another way to start a winter herb garden indoors is to move plants from your garden into your kitchen.

You won't want to uproot whole plants, because by this time of year they are far too large for just about any windowsill. And buying pots for huge herbs would offset any savings you might make by growing gargantuan greens indoors. What you want to save are pieces of the plant--runners or divisions. Herbs like chives and mint divide easily. Others require a bit more work.

However, since the plants at this point are basically freebies, you don't need to concern yourself as much with what will make it through the dry-heat season indoors. If they die, they die, and you've had fresh herbs out of season for free for however long it takes those ill-fated herbs to sputter out.

Do not consider any such windowsill sputtering as a gardening failure. Consider it scientific experimentation and financial pioneering. Maybe you do want to try growing that basil indoors after all.

1. To transfer suitably sized outdoor herbs to your windowsill pot, look for new growth. Some herbs can be divided. Others, such as this golden thyme (above), can be separated from the mother plant by inserting a trowel mother plant by inserting a trowel sharply just behind the newly formed roots of an advancing stem.

2. Put the plant and root ball in a plastic bag to transport it back to your kitchen sink or potting table.

3. Pot it up, water thoroughly, and sharpen your scissors.

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