If you found this video helpful, please “Like” it and share it to help increase its reach! Thanks for watching😊 TIMESTAMPS here: 0:00 The Benefits Of Growing Herbs 1:20 Benefit #1: Naturally Repel Pests 2:38 Benefit #2: Invasive Herbs 4:42 Benefit #3: Grow Healthier Plants 6:17 Benefit #4: Ground Cover & Weed Prevention 7:33 Benefit #5: Landscaping 9:24 How To Plant Herbs Strategically 12:52 Adventures With Dale
@@michp7 they’re just as bad here in NC. A Southern thing maybe? I moved here from Louisiana and the fire ants were crazy. I’m from WA, originally and I don’t remember ever seeing a fire ant growing up
@@TheRooflesstoofless I'm from upstate NY originally and I've been in Florida for a little over 7 years now... Fire ants are definitely not native here and they are invasive....
We raised a granddaughter. Daily we went outside in the garden, "Helping Papa". She was 3, and was silent for a long time then said, "look what I did!". She had opened every seed pkg (saved or bought) and mixed them in a bucket. At the time the garden consisted only of 200' around the pool. I let her plant what she wanted and swimmers were amazed to see lavender next to tomatoes next to snap dragons next to okra. I had the fewest bugs I have ever had with this haphazard "planting".
Side Note: get pen and paper to diagram the layout of the future homestead, I do not care if you change it 4 times, seeing it on paper will help you with the design details.
I'm glad to see you encouraging gardeners to use companion planting! So many channels claim it doesn't work but I can tell you that we use several matches made in Heaven every year with great success! We plant petunias near squash plants to repel squash bugs, plant marigolds anywhere you have nematodes in the soil, plant alliums near anything and everything, plant thyme near strawberries. Great video by the way!
it's wild how much fruit tree youtube is against guilds and companion planting. It makes so much sense and I found out it works great for me. I dont trust channels who say it has no benefit anymore
@@GeorgeLucas1138 Honestly I don't trust those channels anymore either. If they don't know how well it works, they've either never tried it or they did it wrong to begin with.
It’s not that the claim it doesn’t work. More people are worried about nutrient stealing from one to another or they think it lacks putting nutrients back that they were looking to replace by what the other took away.
@@Just_A_Name14 that's a straw man argument. If there is a lack of available nutrients thats on the grower. It's not hard to give plants what they need.
Pro tip: Don't ever plant mint near a fence you share with a neighbor, unless you want to start a never-ending feud with that neighbor. Your mint WILL migrate.
I agree with many of points with exception of saying herbs like rosemary and lavender struggle in the heat. They are dry loving plants. My summers are in the 90s and low 100 and my herbs are so happy in the sun. What they don't love is wet feet. Your soil is too wet and not draining well enough for Mediterranean herbs. I would challenge you to try them in a well draining pot, in the sun and see how healthy your rosemary is. I would also suggestion that since these are perennial plants, going to flower is not the same as bolting. It means the plant is doing well.
Yeah, my rosemary & oregano survive through freezes in my herb spiral. They get a little stressed when it's 105-115 in the middle of summer, but still do well even when the temps dip into the teens & 20s during the winter. Lavender isn't happy because it's so rainy throughout the winter & spring before the scorching summer comes.
Yes you are right. I used to live near Death Valley in So Cal and the rosemary was so abundant. All the markets would landscape their parking lots with rosemary. It gets 120 in the summer months🥵 and pretty cold in the winter..zero at times.
Very good advice! I have planted my herbs and mints in their own containers, except for Basil. I plant that with my tomatoes. One of the things I've read about interplanting is to have a veggie, an herb and a pollinator friendly flower. That way all bases are covered.
I planted two types of thyme in my blueberry patch because I needed plants that could handle the acid in my blueberry soil. Worked great but boy does it grow. I chop it back and whatever isn’t stored for later use gets mulched on my susceptible plants
Hi this is Joanne from Fresno California. I wanted to know if you could please make a video on how to start doing our vegetables, tomatoes, cucumbers, from seeds, and how to grow them? When to start? For this upcoming season names of brand a vegetable seeds, where we could purchase them, and what the brands are. thank you I’ll be watching.❤
@@joannegonzales3448in your area botanical intrests is a good seed company also millenial gardner has a vid on all that also another good one is epic gardening he is also the owner of botanical intrests
The timing of this video was impeccable because I was sitting down to plan my food forest and this really got the gears turning in my head. I’m totally revamping my plans for my food forest.
I'm one of those people who tries too hard with planning. When I finally got my little property I wasted two years trying to figure out the "best" way to plant everything but sometimes the plants didn't actually like that "perfect" spot I'd picked out, and sooo much time got spent thinking and analyzing that could've been spent planting and growing things. My food forest is finally coming together and it's mostly due to me letting go of my urge to control and allowing the plants to tell me where they want to be. I feel like God has a better plan than I can come up with so I try to listen to the inner voice when I'm planting long-term investment trees and shrubs, and plant lots and lots of the little stuff everywhere, they'll thrive where they're happy. That's not to say a general plan is a bad idea, but leave room for chance and luck and error. Good luck with your food forest!
Yeah- I've been stuck in analysis paralysis for a couple weeks now but I'm in zone 7a and Mother Nature is saying, "Tick tock tick tock..." I gotta get a move on, especially 'cause I don't have a single bed built! 😂
I do both! Interplant in beds and a small bed or spiral bed near the kitchen door. It's just convenient to also have them outside the back kitchen door.
You know what you should do at your place in Florida? You should just sling a bunch of random cheap seeds around all over the place next time you're there. Then you can see what grows and what doesn't and how it works. The easy stuff will grow where it's easy, the hard stuff will grow where it can. You'll learn a lot and then you'll also show up and have a bunch of vegetables in exchange for practically no work. Just blow like 50 bucks on seed packets and scatter them all over the place kind of uniformly. Then when you go to plant your serious tomatoes you can plant them in the spot where the tomatoes grew really well on their own without any work
I planted my basil with my tomatoes and red bell peppers last year. I had the best tomato harvest of my life. I was also harvesting and drying basil constantly and am still using it for cooking. The peppers didn't do too bad either.
Try fermenting basil into a paste this season. Retains much better flavor than the ice cube method and its as easy as spooning out of a refrigerated jar and easier to portion using that method.
How did you keep the basil healthy and alive where the tomatoes don’t shade it out. I planted basil about the same time as my tomatoes but all the basil plants died, I assume from too much shade from the tomatoes.
I did this by accident many years ago - saw the benefit and have gone wild since! I’ve planted among my flower bulbs, and tender annual flowers- no problem with even aphids or anything. Cruciferous are left alone by moths- So excited you’ve shared this- yay!
Rosemary tip: let the plant talk to you about its water needs. If it looks dry and drops leaves, it’s too dry. If it starts putting out red leaves, it’s too wet. Now off to take a hatchet to my oregano….. P.S. My Rosemary gets sun from sunrise to sunset in gulf coast Alabama and it’s quite happy, just gets a bit weary in deepest summer…
I agree with you. I like to grow herbs in a bed close to my kitchen for cooking because they are some of the only plants that can take the Texas heat. But, I think you can also interplant the herbs with your other veggies to ward off the pests, as well. You know you can propagate your herbs from the older plants for free and plant the new cuttings between your fruit trees and then pull out the older herb plants that have spread too far in your veggie beds.
You confirmed my plan. I will plant the herbs in smaller planters in front of my big planters so they are protecting my plants but I can move them in the heat of the summer and bring them into a winter location when it gets cold. My front flower beds get too hot for them.
I just found your channel because I ordered some Okinawa Sweet Potato slips and was looking for help on planting and now I’m going down a hole of all your extremely informational videos. Great stuff!!!
My dear dear friend: hey and hi!!! I love your channel and don’t miss an episode!!! One general comment: be careful with mint. It is invasive beyond belief. With one exception, we kept it in containers and even then, it was problematic. Over thirty years ago, I had a container garden for tomatoes, peppers, cucumbers and okra. I interplanted mint with my okra and had no ant problems whatsoever. I also interplanted mint with my garlic in the flower beds adjacent to the house. While the mint completely took over the garlic beds, the one good thing was we had no ants around or inside the house. This was years where we were invaded by red ants. As a matter of fact, the only thing that killed the mint was exceptional drought. For two years though, we had good container grown veggies and mint running out the wazoo!! Just thought I would share that with you. I thoroughly enjoy your videos and have learned immensely from them and you!!! Thanks so much!!! Until your next video and beyond, happy trails, best wishes, take care, be safe and God bless!!! Chuck Knight from Atascocita, Texas. ✝️👨🌾🦌🏈🙏
Good to know about the ants! Here in South Fl. I get those really tiny ants, I call them ghost ants, they are everywhere, in my garden, coming in the house, they even took up residence in my sage pot, I hope it works against them too.
@@bethb8276 Beth … you might also try pennyroyal; I have read that it is even more magic than mint. We just grew mint because Mom liked it in her tea. Thanks for the comment!!! God bless!!! Chuck Knight. ✝️👨🌾🙏
@charlesknight3204 I love peppermint in my tea too. I will take your advice about both the mint and pennyroyal and give it a shot, thank you, and God's blessings to you too.
I’m SO EXCITED! Because I saw your awesome hinged hoop house video I wanted one so badly. For my birthday my brother watched the video and built me TWO beautiful hinged hoop houses this weekend that I adore. I can not wait to fill them with the soil mix you made on another video and get growing! Thank you so so much. Your parts list was spot on and your directions were absolutely perfect🌺🌹🌸🌼🌷💐
I think herb gardens were planted near the kitchen for the convenience of the cook to gather them easily. Herbs are a diverse group. Rosemary will grow in your 8a zone outside but very few varieties of it can grow in zones lower than that. Good to see you are encouraging interplanting under your fruit trees. The time to plant oregano or thyme is now while the trees are getting established. The perception that trees are deep rooted has changed. Trees structures in general are now considered to be more like a wine glass, with the top 18 inches of the soil being used by the tree roots, so be gentle and careful when planting under established trees.
Took me quite a few seasons before I eventually realized that the leftover extra herb plants from the planting of my herb beds actually grew extremely well when scattered around within my other plants. Interplanting is the definitely way to go.
I was watching a video of yours from 4 years ago, its craaaazy how far along this yard has come! I cant wait to own my own home and do something like this!
Hello from Union County! Great video, Anthony, I got a lot of good information. I never thought to use herbs as a ground cover but, you are so right. I had to remove my oregano and thyme from the beds to pots as they were taking over, and even now the oregano is spilling over the top of the pot. I love being able to go and cut fresh herbs all year long, even through our NC winters. I enjoy your videos so much. You give great advice and information in an easy to understand way. Keep up the great work and thank you!
I have an herb garden and i was planning to transplant & new plants in our perennial & vegetable gardens. Mint took over one of my beds and I didn't cut the flowers of chives. The next year it was a mess of deep rooted seedlings everywhere. I removed most of my rosemary last year. Some herbs help with Deer. Thanks AI for suggesting this video.
Lots of good tips and information here. Spreading out the herbs will be spreading another great layer of scent as well. I never knew they wouldn’t do well in complete shade because of inability to produce flowers. Good to know. 🌱
I used to be right into herbs and almost made one of those silly herb gardens. Now I grow a much reduced selection of herbs, with perennials having their own spots in ornamental border, and quick herbs tucked in here or there. Forget oregano, just tries to take over, and dont use that much of it in kitchen. So my herbs are: prostrate rosemary in a pot (grows nice and slowly), french tarragon in part of ornamental border where it wont get disturbed as it dies back for winter, thyme in ornamental border, sage in ornamental border, some mints in pots, a tiny patch of chives in ornamental border, sorrel at back of ornamental border. One or two parsley plants wherever i find room for them somewhere in ornamental border, spring onions and coriander wherever these short term crops can find a spot, in a pot with other plants or at end of veggie row. Occasionally grow a bit of dill in not much disturbed location, as it takes a while to grow. Was hoping this list was shorter, alas. Anyway, I stopped growing all those herbs that find rare use in kitchen, even if they're nice plants with a nice flavour. Practicality won out.
I keep parsley underlying cherry tree. I love it and use it often as a garnish on pasta and often in a salsa w cherry tomatoes chillies and honey. Great w white meat or on any sandwich or burger. Usually I cut bundles in a glass of water to have on hand in the kitchen or just give it a snip outside to become mulch
I’m planting lavender around my red raspberries and rosemary around the broccoli and Brussel sprouts. I refer to what you are saying as defensive planting.
I started growing vege half a year ago and turned out pretty good and it's very environmental friendly and save money when the food are so expensive right now I really like this channel because you are so smart 👍👍👍
So what just watched this video and I’m growing five to six different fruit plants in my yard and this video helped me think more positively about the best ways to control the environment in my yard thank goodness for your videos you’re great inspiration to the growing community even if it’s just a little amount
Love all of your videos this one did get the gears turning I've been wanting to grow herbs live in central N.C. sanford to be exact we have close to the same climate only been gardening for about three years your video's really help me out ,garden get's more productive every year just purchased a small 6'x12' greenhouse to help and making my own potting soil too thanks to you I'm taking this shit serious
I think that's true to a degree. But when you have thousands of square feet of weeds to pull, it's no fun, especially when it's 92 degrees with 70% humidity 😂
THIS! Thank-you. It makes total sense to interplant herbs, and you woke something up in my winter-fogged brain. I now realize I need a new plan attack for 2024. I’m eager to get out in the garden and begin, but I’ll have to wait for it to warm up a bit since it’s been so cold here in northern Colorado. Maybe next month…
Companion planting is awesome 👍. Thank you for talking about the difference between annual and perennials. Sounds like it is time for some transplanting.
This is a great idea. I've recently discovered fruit tree guilds - a type of companion planting, centred around a fruit tree, containing plants that restore the soil, cover the soil, attract pollinators, repel pests and create mulch
Interesting and all makes sense. Conversely, if you like your wildlife as well as your crop plants, it helps to confine them to a small area. And they look nice in a rockery, stony border, sloping pond edge.
I'm so envious! My lemon thyme has taken 3 years to double in size! Queen Siam Thai basil, dwarf bicolor amaranth, and Red Shiso (not invasive in Northern climates) are some of the prettiest edible ornamentals!
@@bangmo2860 Southern MI, I think the issue is a lack of sun. German thyme leafs out around June, significantly later for the lemon thyme. Groing anything behind it reduces its full sun exposure to less than 6 hours a day.
Love this video, 2nd year growing veggies in pots. Tomatoes got blight last year, in Texas had the hottest summer ever, in the planning stages now, timing of your video is perfect.
I three creeping thyme all over the property. I love it. It's starting to spread in all the right places. I contained the mint on my property with weed tarps, I had to, the previous owner planted it and it took over. Now it's only after my weed tarp for now... can't wait to do my fruit trees this year or next.
Great info. I planted spearmint and chocolate mint under our blackberries and they are all thriving. In a huge way! I love interplanting! We plant basil with tomatoes to improve the flavor, and I think the tomatoes help to shade the basil! 🌿
I'm in Florida. The sandy soil and pests are unlike anywhere else I've lived. It has taken a while for me to figure out what works. And I'm still learning!
I had rosemary as my front yard hedges in a previous home and I miss the beauty and convenience. There are photos of rosemary hedges online. It's a reat idea to consider those as hedges!
So interesting thanks so much 🙌 You’re so right 😊 I did a small course last year Permaculture and learnt about what your saying. And it’s better way of gardening. I have moved into a small unit and not a lot of garden and mixing my herbs with vegetables, fruit trees and flowering plants to get more out of my garden as each plant has its properties and benefits to help each plant and then no pesticides is the way to go.
Agreed. However, in my zone, 6A, I put my herbs in pots, and set them in my vegetable garden, or for herbs that cannot take 6+ hours of sunlight, under/around my fruit trees, etc... Being in pots, I can bring them indoors, for the winter.
WOW!!!!! I just found you. I live in Carteret cty. NC want to begin all this. I will try to get my husband to watch this,SHE is the yard boss. I just wish a lot.
I have my parsley tucked up next to a fence; it gets basically 0 hours of direct sunlight at this time of the year. It's thriving. Obviously it won't make it to summertime, but herbs are great for places other things can't go.
Thank you for reminding me why i stopped growing an 'herb garden' , got distracted by my wife asking for one. 🤣 I know the most important thing is to make sure that she has access to all of the herbs regardless of where they are growing. 😄
I got clearance oregano plants four years back the end of the season, I deep planted them in my garden right before winter hit. Covered them with straw, when Spring came round all the plants sprang to life and have survived every polar vortex and summer heat wave. I’ve collected and spread seeds, cuttings and literally will never have to buy oregano again. The bees love the oregano flowers so now I use phenology as much as possible to intercrop within the garden realms of native and not native plants I’m bringing in to create a phenological calendar system. It’s like layering companion planting with phenology to maximize flowering times for super advanced pollination and planting schedule.
Item #3... Totally makes sense That said...I lived in Phoenix for 8+ years....had a baby Rosemary in the front "yard" (vast majority of residents have gravel)... Purchased in a small cup from HD...just like MG's thyme Kept it watered during the 104+ degree summers... Not much over the winter... The thing grew literally into a giant Shrub! Like 4' wide and tall Finally trimmed it back... Went too far...It croaked...😮 Regardless.... Yet another great video. Cheers! JerBear in 6b
Take a hacksaw and cut the oregano in half, put half back in the pot and the other half against the house. I did that with my herbs and pomegranate trees. Just a suggestion. Pet Dale for me, thank you for the upload.
I have a small herb garden for the ones I use the most - rosemary, thyme, basil, oregano, sage. They have similar requirements and grow pretty well together. Among my other bigger plants and trees, I have more of the same - they protect the plants / trees from some pests, and help cover the ground to protect it from sun, prevent weeds and prevent water loss.
Such good advice! Last season I interplanted all my herbs and I had the least (almost no) insect pests. I loaded up my raised beds with nasturtiums, basils, rosemary, marigolds, dill, cilantro, chives, green onions, chamomile etc. Also, I regularly rotate my plantings so I am not growing plants in the same space each year. Regards from Southern New Hampshire ❤
Your energy and channel is wonderful! I am a beginning home gardener and learning so much! I did plant herbs with peppers and cucumbers to protect them. Also spaced out garlic and green onions with my other plants. It makes sense because Italian herbs pair with tomatoes and peppers!
I interplanted my annual herbs in the vegetable garden, but the perennials separately. We didn't have any fruit trees at the time. The really invasive ones were planted in pots, and some of those were put in the garden at the end of the raised beds, so that probably was a benefit for helping with insects. One of my outdoor cats would sleep in the perennial herb garden under the oregano. 🙂 While I was watching this, it made me realize it probably kept bugs off of her.
I've got a couple of small containers I use for my herbs, I have to bring them in to overwinter them so it's the only way I can keep them alive year-round. Bonus is, I don't have to worry about them taking over the rest of my garden.
A very helpful and common sense take on the multiple uses of beneficial herbs! Thank you for your full explanations on how/why you see them in your productve food garden.😊🙏🍀
I am amazed that your west side gets so little sun. The west summer sun is absolutely brutal on the backside of my home in Texas. I needed this herb video. Thank you !
Love your channel, good buddy. I tried to put mint and basil in the same pot. Could not figure out what the problem was. I think they just cannot co-exist. Now I have oregano and thyme in the same pot, no problem. Florida here (Tampa) and sadly we cannot plant much in the soil here because of nematodes inside the "soil". These nematodes eat the roots. Hope your place is north FL. Please call your county extension service here before you get too far with your plans, they were very helpful and sent me pdf files of info on almost everything. The temps, diseases, and especially the soil is so much different here than even Atlanta. I made a lot of mistakes. Even tomatoes have be be grown in pots and that dirt is expensive to buy, suggestion, load your car with dirt every time you come down. Thanks Dale.
Just a quick design tip for you because I had to go back to see the list of herbs you were saying because they did not have contrast which made me miss them entirely & you should probably have put them on the right side of the viewers view. Great herb tip, thanks!
No fruit trees and I do not have space like you. Also I find a many of my herbs need full sun. I have a smaller garden, and use only 14 raised beds. I plant all my herbs as companion plants and use the vegetables to shade those that don't want the afternoon sun. I trim them up every couple of weeks to a month and dehydrate or canning. Also I use an abundance of herbs in cooking everyday. I've never really had a problem with them getting overgrown. Thanks for sharing your environment work arounds.
Yes! I have an Autumn Damask rose that lives between lavender and thyme. The basil always gets planted with the tomatoes. I have oregano between 2 knockout roses. The mint is all by itself near a cedar tree because that stuff is out of control. The cilantro is by the black iris. I'm planning on planting white sage by my Starfish Japanese maple. Bee balm is by the door. Herbs are everywhere. I like the idea of using the thyme and oregano for ground cover. I will have to plant some more around my roses...which I hate weeding because I always get stuck by thorns.
I’m going to try this between my 3 Rose of Sharon bushes. Thanks for the great idea. Better use of space and some green in the dead of winter! And, if I’m lucky, they will repel pests. They were overrun with mealy bugs last summer!
When you relocate, maybe you’d consider starting a teaching course, on how to garden! Maybe sell seeds and small plants, once a month or something! You’re super knowledgeable. I appreciate it. I’m fairly knew to this & have already made a yuck amount of mistakes. If you ever consider it, please do share the when & where 😅🙏🏼🙏🏼🙏🏼
Brilliant! I didn't think of planting herbs under my fruit trees. I was thinking of placing annuals next to plants that benefit from them and had no clue what to do with perennial herbs.. I think I'll do this
A bunch of years ago when we were in a condo with a small balcony I bought a small planter and some starter herbs from the farmers market. And of course I included mint. Oh my lord, that sucker killed all of the other herbs in like a month. Very much a learning experience on mint and space.
If you found this video helpful, please “Like” it and share it to help increase its reach! Thanks for watching😊 TIMESTAMPS here:
0:00 The Benefits Of Growing Herbs
1:20 Benefit #1: Naturally Repel Pests
2:38 Benefit #2: Invasive Herbs
4:42 Benefit #3: Grow Healthier Plants
6:17 Benefit #4: Ground Cover & Weed Prevention
7:33 Benefit #5: Landscaping
9:24 How To Plant Herbs Strategically
12:52 Adventures With Dale
I'd like to see you put knot gardens under your espelier fruit trees!
th-cam.com/video/Pf6WhBZggdk/w-d-xo.htmlsi=i8ephMpeLJefUBFI
In addition to the herbs you mentioned, I'll need to plant catnip. My cats will appreciate that, plus the occasional neighborhood visitor cat. 😍
Not sure how bad fire ants are in North Carolina, but here in Northern Florida they are dreadful ...
@@michp7 they’re just as bad here in NC. A Southern thing maybe? I moved here from Louisiana and the fire ants were crazy.
I’m from WA, originally and I don’t remember ever seeing a fire ant growing up
@@TheRooflesstoofless I'm from upstate NY originally and I've been in Florida for a little over 7 years now... Fire ants are definitely not native here and they are invasive....
We raised a granddaughter. Daily we went outside in the garden, "Helping Papa". She was 3, and was silent for a long time then said, "look what I did!". She had opened every seed pkg (saved or bought) and mixed them in a bucket. At the time the garden consisted only of 200' around the pool. I let her plant what she wanted and swimmers were amazed to see lavender next to tomatoes next to snap dragons next to okra. I had the fewest bugs I have ever had with this haphazard "planting".
Side Note: get pen and paper to diagram the layout of the future homestead, I do not care if you change it 4 times, seeing it on paper will help you with the design details.
I'm glad to see you encouraging gardeners to use companion planting! So many channels claim it doesn't work but I can tell you that we use several matches made in Heaven every year with great success! We plant petunias near squash plants to repel squash bugs, plant marigolds anywhere you have nematodes in the soil, plant alliums near anything and everything, plant thyme near strawberries. Great video by the way!
it's wild how much fruit tree youtube is against guilds and companion planting. It makes so much sense and I found out it works great for me. I dont trust channels who say it has no benefit anymore
@@GeorgeLucas1138 Honestly I don't trust those channels anymore either. If they don't know how well it works, they've either never tried it or they did it wrong to begin with.
Companion planting is wonderful.
It’s not that the claim it doesn’t work. More people are worried about nutrient stealing from one to another or they think it lacks putting nutrients back that they were looking to replace by what the other took away.
@@Just_A_Name14 that's a straw man argument. If there is a lack of available nutrients thats on the grower. It's not hard to give plants what they need.
Pro tip: Don't ever plant mint near a fence you share with a neighbor, unless you want to start a never-ending feud with that neighbor. Your mint WILL migrate.
Sounds like you have an incredibly ungrateful neighbour.
Same goes for bamboo!!!!!😲😑🙄
And wisteria
I never had that issue with mint or wisteria. Don’t you prune?
their ivy is migrating So I’m fighting back with mint
I agree with many of points with exception of saying herbs like rosemary and lavender struggle in the heat. They are dry loving plants. My summers are in the 90s and low 100 and my herbs are so happy in the sun. What they don't love is wet feet. Your soil is too wet and not draining well enough for Mediterranean herbs. I would challenge you to try them in a well draining pot, in the sun and see how healthy your rosemary is. I would also suggestion that since these are perennial plants, going to flower is not the same as bolting. It means the plant is doing well.
Yeah, my rosemary & oregano survive through freezes in my herb spiral. They get a little stressed when it's 105-115 in the middle of summer, but still do well even when the temps dip into the teens & 20s during the winter. Lavender isn't happy because it's so rainy throughout the winter & spring before the scorching summer comes.
The issue, I think, is that your herbs will flower in full sunlight, which would make them less useable for eating.
Yes you are right. I used to live near Death Valley in So Cal and the rosemary was so abundant. All the markets would landscape their parking lots with rosemary. It gets 120 in the summer months🥵 and pretty cold in the winter..zero at times.
Very good advice! I have planted my herbs and mints in their own containers, except for Basil. I plant that with my tomatoes. One of the things I've read about interplanting is to have a veggie, an herb and a pollinator friendly flower. That way all bases are covered.
Great advice! Thank you.
I planted two types of thyme in my blueberry patch because I needed plants that could handle the acid in my blueberry soil. Worked great but boy does it grow. I chop it back and whatever isn’t stored for later use gets mulched on my susceptible plants
Hi this is Joanne from Fresno California. I wanted to know if you could please make a video on how to start doing our vegetables, tomatoes, cucumbers, from seeds, and how to grow them? When to start? For this upcoming season names of brand a vegetable seeds, where we could purchase them, and what the brands are. thank you I’ll be watching.❤
Great idea
It's kinda nice to get your "green manure" from a plant that you'd grow anyway for another purpose.
@@joannegonzales3448it really dosen't matter the seed brand just find a trusted source
@@joannegonzales3448in your area botanical intrests is a good seed company also millenial gardner has a vid on all that also another good one is epic gardening he is also the owner of botanical intrests
The timing of this video was impeccable because I was sitting down to plan my food forest and this really got the gears turning in my head. I’m totally revamping my plans for my food forest.
I'm one of those people who tries too hard with planning. When I finally got my little property I wasted two years trying to figure out the "best" way to plant everything but sometimes the plants didn't actually like that "perfect" spot I'd picked out, and sooo much time got spent thinking and analyzing that could've been spent planting and growing things. My food forest is finally coming together and it's mostly due to me letting go of my urge to control and allowing the plants to tell me where they want to be. I feel like God has a better plan than I can come up with so I try to listen to the inner voice when I'm planting long-term investment trees and shrubs, and plant lots and lots of the little stuff everywhere, they'll thrive where they're happy.
That's not to say a general plan is a bad idea, but leave room for chance and luck and error. Good luck with your food forest!
Yeah- I've been stuck in analysis paralysis for a couple weeks now but I'm in zone 7a and Mother Nature is saying, "Tick tock tick tock..." I gotta get a move on, especially 'cause I don't have a single bed built! 😂
I do both! Interplant in beds and a small bed or spiral bed near the kitchen door. It's just convenient to also have them outside the back kitchen door.
I agree so hard! Putting basil oregano and thyme between tommytoes was a game changer!😊
It definitely helps!
@TheMillennialGardener love the heart! Makes my FROZEN DAY!
All the yummy ingredients in spaghetti sauce!
You know what you should do at your place in Florida? You should just sling a bunch of random cheap seeds around all over the place next time you're there. Then you can see what grows and what doesn't and how it works. The easy stuff will grow where it's easy, the hard stuff will grow where it can. You'll learn a lot and then you'll also show up and have a bunch of vegetables in exchange for practically no work. Just blow like 50 bucks on seed packets and scatter them all over the place kind of uniformly.
Then when you go to plant your serious tomatoes you can plant them in the spot where the tomatoes grew really well on their own without any work
Chaos gardening!
I planted my basil with my tomatoes and red bell peppers last year. I had the best tomato harvest of my life. I was also harvesting and drying basil constantly and am still using it for cooking. The peppers didn't do too bad either.
Did you try making into pesto and freezing?
@@1OKToni Freeze pesto in ice cube trays then store in sandwich bags in freezer. My wife has done that for 40 years.
Try fermenting basil into a paste this season. Retains much better flavor than the ice cube method and its as easy as spooning out of a refrigerated jar and easier to portion using that method.
@@JohnJohn-wr1jo Fermenting changes the flavor and many people find it objectionable.
How did you keep the basil healthy and alive where the tomatoes don’t shade it out. I planted basil about the same time as my tomatoes but all the basil plants died, I assume from too much shade from the tomatoes.
I did this by accident many years ago - saw the benefit and have gone wild since! I’ve planted among my flower bulbs, and tender annual flowers- no problem with even aphids or anything. Cruciferous are left alone by moths- So excited you’ve shared this- yay!
Did you used to have a problem with aphids? We didn't before but last year they 'moved in' everywhere.
Rosemary tip: let the plant talk to you about its water needs. If it looks dry and drops leaves, it’s too dry. If it starts putting out red leaves, it’s too wet. Now off to take a hatchet to my oregano….. P.S. My Rosemary gets sun from sunrise to sunset in gulf coast Alabama and it’s quite happy, just gets a bit weary in deepest summer…
I agree with you. I like to grow herbs in a bed close to my kitchen for cooking because they are some of the only plants that can take the Texas heat. But, I think you can also interplant the herbs with your other veggies to ward off the pests, as well.
You know you can propagate your herbs from the older plants for free and plant the new cuttings between your fruit trees and then pull out the older herb plants that have spread too far in your veggie beds.
Yes, I interspersed my herbs throughout my garden. But, I love having an herb garden in or around my kitchen or patio. Ya know, for convenience.
Same. All my herbs are close to the house where I don’t have to walk too far to snip some off when I’m in the middle of cooking.
I hope to plant a smaller kitchen garden for convenience but have interspersed plants
I hope to have a small kitchen herb garden where it's convenient, but have larger areas planted around the garden.
Exactly. Why not do both?
You confirmed my plan. I will plant the herbs in smaller planters in front of my big planters so they are protecting my plants but I can move them in the heat of the summer and bring them into a winter location when it gets cold. My front flower beds get too hot for them.
Your herbs will appreciate shade in summer.
PLEASE - do a series on growing espalier trees! Those are gorgeous!!!
Would love to see a video on your trees also
Agree - they are amazing
I just found your channel because I ordered some Okinawa Sweet Potato slips and was looking for help on planting and now I’m going down a hole of all your extremely informational videos. Great stuff!!!
Glad you're enjoying the videos!
My dear dear friend: hey and hi!!! I love your channel and don’t miss an episode!!! One general comment: be careful with mint. It is invasive beyond belief. With one exception, we kept it in containers and even then, it was problematic. Over thirty years ago, I had a container garden for tomatoes, peppers, cucumbers and okra. I interplanted mint with my okra and had no ant problems whatsoever. I also interplanted mint with my garlic in the flower beds adjacent to the house. While the mint completely took over the garlic beds, the one good thing was we had no ants around or inside the house. This was years where we were invaded by red ants. As a matter of fact, the only thing that killed the mint was exceptional drought. For two years though, we had good container grown veggies and mint running out the wazoo!! Just thought I would share that with you. I thoroughly enjoy your videos and have learned immensely from them and you!!! Thanks so much!!! Until your next video and beyond, happy trails, best wishes, take care, be safe and God bless!!! Chuck Knight from Atascocita, Texas. ✝️👨🌾🦌🏈🙏
Good to know about the ants! Here in South Fl. I get those really tiny ants, I call them ghost ants, they are everywhere, in my garden, coming in the house, they even took up residence in my sage pot, I hope it works against them too.
@@bethb8276 Beth … you might also try pennyroyal; I have read that it is even more magic than mint. We just grew mint because Mom liked it in her tea. Thanks for the comment!!! God bless!!! Chuck Knight. ✝️👨🌾🙏
@charlesknight3204 I love peppermint in my tea too. I will take your advice about both the mint and pennyroyal and give it a shot, thank you, and God's blessings to you too.
🤔 maybe I need to plant mint this year. there's so many ant hills by my house
I do both. My herb garden is literally outside my kitchen.
I’m SO EXCITED! Because I saw your awesome hinged hoop house video I wanted one so badly. For my birthday my brother watched the video and built me TWO beautiful hinged hoop houses this weekend that I adore. I can not wait to fill them with the soil mix you made on another video and get growing! Thank you so so much. Your parts list was spot on and your directions were absolutely perfect🌺🌹🌸🌼🌷💐
Awesome! I’m so glad to hear you have some new beds! It makes a world of difference.
I think herb gardens were planted near the kitchen for the convenience of the cook to gather them easily. Herbs are a diverse group. Rosemary will grow in your 8a zone outside but very few varieties of it can grow in zones lower than that. Good to see you are encouraging interplanting under your fruit trees. The time to plant oregano or thyme is now while the trees are getting established. The perception that trees are deep rooted has changed. Trees structures in general are now considered to be more like a wine glass, with the top 18 inches of the soil being used by the tree roots, so be gentle and careful when planting under established trees.
Took me quite a few seasons before I eventually realized that the leftover extra herb plants from the planting of my herb beds actually grew extremely well when scattered around within my other plants. Interplanting is the definitely way to go.
Your the best instructor when it comes to plants man. It's always a pleasure learning something new from you 😁
Sending positive vibes from Florida
Is it safe to plant around the trees or next too
Apple trees tend to inhibit sprouting if seeds, so keep that in mind.@@bettynickelson779
You need to write a book.. i think you have the best gardening channel
Thank you! I would love to, one day. I work a full time job, so time is non-existent right now, but hopefully in the future things can change.
This is great info. But I grow herbs everywhere because I use so much. That patch of thyme is gold. Sending love from the beaches 💖🐎💃
I was watching a video of yours from 4 years ago, its craaaazy how far along this yard has come! I cant wait to own my own home and do something like this!
Hello from Union County! Great video, Anthony, I got a lot of good information. I never thought to use herbs as a ground cover but, you are so right. I had to remove my oregano and thyme from the beds to pots as they were taking over, and even now the oregano is spilling over the top of the pot. I love being able to go and cut fresh herbs all year long, even through our NC winters. I enjoy your videos so much. You give great advice and information in an easy to understand way. Keep up the great work and thank you!
I do both. I have an herb garden plus I plant herbs all over in my other beds. I love them.
I have an herb garden and i was planning to transplant & new plants in our perennial & vegetable gardens. Mint took over one of my beds and I didn't cut the flowers of chives. The next year it was a mess of deep rooted seedlings everywhere. I removed most of my rosemary last year. Some herbs help with Deer. Thanks AI for suggesting this video.
This made so much sense, taking chance of every square foot. This was awesome. Thank you.
Lots of good tips and information here. Spreading out the herbs will be spreading another great layer of scent as well. I never knew they wouldn’t do well in complete shade because of inability to produce flowers. Good to know. 🌱
I think our rosemary bloomed 😮😅
I used to be right into herbs and almost made one of those silly herb gardens. Now I grow a much reduced selection of herbs, with perennials having their own spots in ornamental border, and quick herbs tucked in here or there. Forget oregano, just tries to take over, and dont use that much of it in kitchen. So my herbs are: prostrate rosemary in a pot (grows nice and slowly), french tarragon in part of ornamental border where it wont get disturbed as it dies back for winter, thyme in ornamental border, sage in ornamental border, some mints in pots, a tiny patch of chives in ornamental border, sorrel at back of ornamental border.
One or two parsley plants wherever i find room for them somewhere in ornamental border, spring onions and coriander wherever these short term crops can find a spot, in a pot with other plants or at end of veggie row. Occasionally grow a bit of dill in not much disturbed location, as it takes a while to grow. Was hoping this list was shorter, alas. Anyway, I stopped growing all those herbs that find rare use in kitchen, even if they're nice plants with a nice flavour. Practicality won out.
It took me ages to remove all my oregano out of the ground. Now I just grow it in a pot.
I keep parsley underlying cherry tree. I love it and use it often as a garnish on pasta and often in a salsa w cherry tomatoes chillies and honey. Great w white meat or on any sandwich or burger. Usually I cut bundles in a glass of water to have on hand in the kitchen or just give it a snip outside to become mulch
I’m planting lavender around my red raspberries and rosemary around the broccoli and Brussel sprouts.
I refer to what you are saying as defensive planting.
Some help put Nutrients In the ground Like growing peanuts and help deter bugs .
I do both. I have a herb garden that I dearly love and also plant out within my garden. :)
dude you literally speak through my soul the way you love interplanting herbs truly Gods work
I learned that borage is good for deterring tomato hornworms and cabbage beetles. Love interplanting!
I started growing vege half a year ago and turned out pretty good and it's very environmental friendly and save money when the food are so expensive right now I really like this channel because you are so smart 👍👍👍
So what just watched this video and I’m growing five to six different fruit plants in my yard and this video helped me think more positively about the best ways to control the environment in my yard thank goodness for your videos you’re great inspiration to the growing community even if it’s just a little amount
I'm glad i found this video. I'll be starting my first garden. And I have been researching companion gardening. I almost cluster planted my herbs.
Perfect timing! I was thinking about Herbs in my garden. Thank you for all of the suggestions!
You’re welcome!
Love all of your videos this one did get the gears turning I've been wanting to grow herbs live in central N.C. sanford to be exact we have close to the same climate only been gardening for about three years your video's really help me out ,garden get's more productive every year just purchased a small 6'x12' greenhouse to help and making my own potting soil too thanks to you I'm taking this shit serious
My spouse loved to pull weeds. They said it gave them a sense of peace.
I think that's true to a degree. But when you have thousands of square feet of weeds to pull, it's no fun, especially when it's 92 degrees with 70% humidity 😂
@@TheMillennialGardener oh I agree. I bought them all kinds of tools and yet she got out there everyday and went to town lol. By hand.
THIS! Thank-you. It makes total sense to interplant herbs, and you woke something up in my winter-fogged brain. I now realize I need a new plan attack for 2024. I’m eager to get out in the garden and begin, but I’ll have to wait for it to warm up a bit since it’s been so cold here in northern Colorado. Maybe next month…
Companion planting is awesome 👍. Thank you for talking about the difference between annual and perennials. Sounds like it is time for some transplanting.
You’re welcome!
i do both, i have herbs on my deck outside the kitchen and i also plant some around the yard. i recently leaned that mint takes over everything!
This is a great idea. I've recently discovered fruit tree guilds - a type of companion planting, centred around a fruit tree, containing plants that restore the soil, cover the soil, attract pollinators, repel pests and create mulch
i do a bit of both! handy to keep a planter of useful stuff closer to the kitchen
That's the direction I have been moving in. Thank you for your timely video
Interesting and all makes sense.
Conversely, if you like your wildlife as well as your crop plants, it helps to confine them to a small area.
And they look nice in a rockery, stony border, sloping pond edge.
I'm so envious! My lemon thyme has taken 3 years to double in size! Queen Siam Thai basil, dwarf bicolor amaranth, and Red Shiso (not invasive in Northern climates) are some of the prettiest edible ornamentals!
For thyme to thrive, give it a rich soil, plenty of water, and a shady spot if you have harsh summers.
@@bangmo2860 Southern MI, I think the issue is a lack of sun. German thyme leafs out around June, significantly later for the lemon thyme. Groing anything behind it reduces its full sun exposure to less than 6 hours a day.
Great video and info here!
Since i started planting herbs with my veggies especially tomatoes, i haven't seen a hornworm in 6 years now.
I actually started doing this last year, growing dill, cilantro and Basil on the edges of most of my raised beds.
Love this video, 2nd year growing veggies in pots. Tomatoes got blight last year, in Texas had the hottest summer ever, in the planning stages now, timing of your video is perfect.
I interplanted my herbs last year. I was amazed at how much less insect pressure i had . Not one cucumber beetle. Less squash bugs.
I three creeping thyme all over the property. I love it. It's starting to spread in all the right places. I contained the mint on my property with weed tarps, I had to, the previous owner planted it and it took over. Now it's only after my weed tarp for now... can't wait to do my fruit trees this year or next.
I love how you summarized the information. It’s so clear and helpful!
Great info.
I planted spearmint and chocolate mint under our blackberries and they are all thriving. In a huge way!
I love interplanting! We plant basil with tomatoes to improve the flavor, and I think the tomatoes help to shade the basil! 🌿
I'm in Florida. The sandy soil and pests are unlike anywhere else I've lived. It has taken a while for me to figure out what works. And I'm still learning!
That’s it! I’ve been debating what shrubs to use in my front yard bed. I’m planting herbs and especially rosemary.
I had rosemary as my front yard hedges in a previous home and I miss the beauty and convenience. There are photos of rosemary hedges online. It's a reat idea to consider those as hedges!
Thank you again! I have a whole new perspective on my HERB GARDEN.
So interesting thanks so much 🙌 You’re so right 😊
I did a small course last year Permaculture and learnt about what your saying. And it’s better way of gardening. I have moved into a small unit and not a lot of garden and mixing my herbs with vegetables, fruit trees and flowering plants to get more out of my garden as each plant has its properties and benefits to help each plant and then no pesticides is the way to go.
I always use herbs as ground cover in my rose garden. It work wonderfully
Glad to hear it!
Ive done this sort of thing for many years. But I've never taken it as far as you have. I plan to do follow your lead more than i have in the past.
Agreed. However, in my zone, 6A, I put my herbs in pots, and set them in my vegetable garden, or for herbs that cannot take 6+ hours of sunlight, under/around my fruit trees, etc... Being in pots, I can bring them indoors, for the winter.
WOW!!!!! I just found you. I live in Carteret cty. NC want to begin all this. I will try to get my husband to watch this,SHE is the yard boss. I just wish a lot.
I have my parsley tucked up next to a fence; it gets basically 0 hours of direct sunlight at this time of the year. It's thriving. Obviously it won't make it to summertime, but herbs are great for places other things can't go.
I certainly agree with you. My friends have asked why do you not have insects in your vegs. Just as you said good insects come. Thank you from NZ
Thank you for reminding me why i stopped growing an 'herb garden' , got distracted by my wife asking for one. 🤣
I know the most important thing is to make sure that she has access to all of the herbs regardless of where they are growing. 😄
I got clearance oregano plants four years back the end of the season, I deep planted them in my garden right before winter hit. Covered them with straw, when Spring came round all the plants sprang to life and have survived every polar vortex and summer heat wave. I’ve collected and spread seeds, cuttings and literally will never have to buy oregano again. The bees love the oregano flowers so now I use phenology as much as possible to intercrop within the garden realms of native and not native plants I’m bringing in to create a phenological calendar system. It’s like layering companion planting with phenology to maximize flowering times for super advanced pollination and planting schedule.
Item #3... Totally makes sense
That said...I lived in Phoenix for 8+ years....had a baby Rosemary in the front "yard" (vast majority of residents have gravel)...
Purchased in a small cup from HD...just like MG's thyme
Kept it watered during the 104+ degree summers... Not much over the winter...
The thing grew literally into a giant Shrub!
Like 4' wide and tall
Finally trimmed it back...
Went too far...It croaked...😮
Regardless.... Yet another great video.
Cheers!
JerBear in 6b
Take a hacksaw and cut the oregano in half, put half back in the pot and the other half against the house. I did that with my herbs and pomegranate trees. Just a suggestion. Pet Dale for me, thank you for the upload.
I have a small herb garden for the ones I use the most - rosemary, thyme, basil, oregano, sage. They have similar requirements and grow pretty well together.
Among my other bigger plants and trees, I have more of the same - they protect the plants / trees from some pests, and help cover the ground to protect it from sun, prevent weeds and prevent water loss.
Such good advice! Last season I interplanted all my herbs and I had the least (almost no) insect pests. I loaded up my raised beds with nasturtiums, basils, rosemary, marigolds, dill, cilantro, chives, green onions, chamomile etc. Also, I regularly rotate my plantings so I am not growing plants in the same space each year. Regards from Southern New Hampshire ❤
For colder climates zones 6-7 grow ARP rosemary
Your energy and channel is wonderful! I am a beginning home gardener and learning so much! I did plant herbs with peppers and cucumbers to protect them. Also spaced out garlic and green onions with my other plants. It makes sense because Italian herbs pair with tomatoes and peppers!
I loven to planten the herbs in my yarden garden. Greatings from Sveden ❤
Love herbs and plant them all around the yard, in containers with flowers and as ground cover.
My sage tried to take over my beds too. Great for transplanting!
TYSM! This video is very educational! I just planted 4 blueberries and now I know what to plant in a couple years between those bushes.
I interplanted my annual herbs in the vegetable garden, but the perennials separately. We didn't have any fruit trees at the time. The really invasive ones were planted in pots, and some of those were put in the garden at the end of the raised beds, so that probably was a benefit for helping with insects. One of my outdoor cats would sleep in the perennial herb garden under the oregano. 🙂 While I was watching this, it made me realize it probably kept bugs off of her.
I've got a couple of small containers I use for my herbs, I have to bring them in to overwinter them so it's the only way I can keep them alive year-round. Bonus is, I don't have to worry about them taking over the rest of my garden.
A very helpful and common sense take on the multiple uses of beneficial herbs! Thank you for your full explanations on how/why you see them in your productve food garden.😊🙏🍀
AWESOME INFORMATION! This confirms my need to fill in the blanks in different parts of my yard!
I plant Herbs in every little vacant space all throught my garden.❤
I am amazed that your west side gets so little sun. The west summer sun is absolutely brutal on the backside of my home in Texas. I needed this herb video. Thank you !
Trees and other houses block the path. By the time the sun reaches west, it is too low in the sky.
Love your channel, good buddy. I tried to put mint and basil in the same pot. Could not figure out what the problem was. I think they just cannot co-exist. Now I have oregano and thyme in the same pot, no problem. Florida here (Tampa) and sadly we cannot plant much in the soil here because of nematodes inside the "soil". These nematodes eat the roots.
Hope your place is north FL. Please call your county extension service here before you get too far with your plans, they were very helpful and sent me pdf files of info on almost everything. The temps, diseases, and especially the soil is so much different here than even Atlanta. I made a lot of mistakes. Even tomatoes have be be grown in pots and that dirt is expensive to buy, suggestion, load your car with dirt every time you come down.
Thanks Dale.
My mint and basil do very well in the same bed that’s weird
@@aig9672 No, these two were in the same pot. Very, very close to each other, when I separated them, they were both much happier.
THANK YOU!! You are truly passionate about your gardening. Bless you! I will definitely incorporate in my garden. Keep gardening!!
Ty millennial gardener. So much to learn and ty for sharing your wealth of knowledge !
You’re welcome!
I plant dill around my tomatoes, along with basil. No hornworm issues. And welcome to FL.
Just a quick design tip for you because I had to go back to see the list of herbs you were saying because they did not have contrast which made me miss them entirely & you should probably have put them on the right side of the viewers view. Great herb tip, thanks!
No fruit trees and I do not have space like you. Also I find a many of my herbs need full sun. I
have a smaller garden, and use only 14 raised beds. I plant all my herbs as companion plants and use the vegetables to shade those that don't want the afternoon sun. I trim them up every couple of weeks to a month and dehydrate or canning. Also I use an abundance of herbs in cooking everyday. I've never really had a problem with them getting overgrown. Thanks for sharing your environment work arounds.
Yes! I have an Autumn Damask rose that lives between lavender and thyme. The basil always gets planted with the tomatoes. I have oregano between 2 knockout roses. The mint is all by itself near a cedar tree because that stuff is out of control. The cilantro is by the black iris. I'm planning on planting white sage by my Starfish Japanese maple. Bee balm is by the door. Herbs are everywhere. I like the idea of using the thyme and oregano for ground cover. I will have to plant some more around my roses...which I hate weeding because I always get stuck by thorns.
I’m going to try this between my 3 Rose of Sharon bushes. Thanks for the great idea. Better use of space and some green in the dead of winter! And, if I’m lucky, they will repel pests. They were overrun with mealy bugs last summer!
When you relocate, maybe you’d consider starting a teaching course, on how to garden! Maybe sell seeds and small plants, once a month or something! You’re super knowledgeable. I appreciate it. I’m fairly knew to this & have already made a yuck amount of mistakes. If you ever consider it, please do share the when & where 😅🙏🏼🙏🏼🙏🏼
Brilliant! I didn't think of planting herbs under my fruit trees. I was thinking of placing annuals next to plants that benefit from them and had no clue what to do with perennial herbs.. I think I'll do this
A bunch of years ago when we were in a condo with a small balcony I bought a small planter and some starter herbs from the farmers market. And of course I included mint. Oh my lord, that sucker killed all of the other herbs in like a month. Very much a learning experience on mint and space.