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jll0306

What herbs are you propagating now?

jll0306
10 years ago

I love this time of year. The majority of the planting out is done, the veggies are in full swing, and there's not much to do in the garden, except to propagate.And that I'm doing like crazy. More plants to share! Yayee.

This year my oregano, chives and lemon thyme were finally big enough to divide and after months of babying, I finally have some seed-raised orange thyme at the two leaf stage, and Horizon Herbs Mayan mint at the half-inch stage. It's not quite as slow growing as the thyme, but it's close. I would be happy to break down and buy bigger plants as I finally did with the orange thyme, but I never see it for sale.

I've dropped some ornamental thyme seeds in various pots and beds at different times, and now have healthy patches of it cropping up everywhere. My thought is that it will either become a living mulch, or be transplanted to a neglected part of the yard as ground cover, or remain as the sole surviving container plant, once the annuals bite the dust. There comes a time here when it's too hot here to think about replanting anything.

My 18 month old Xhosa plant is a beautiful green mound about 2 feet in diameter and covered with white flowers. It is an African dream herb grown from Horizon herbs seed that is supposed to reseed easily. I hope it takes over its bed completely.

I love Lemon Verbena. It smells so great in a potpourri with orange mint and rose geranium, but my shrub from last year appears not to have made it through the winter. I bought two new plants to replace it, and have already started rooting some growing tips. I will never be without this plant again....nor of the orange mint and rose geranium! They are the easiest of all plants to grow from cuttings. Other mints (lemon, pear,oregano-thyme, chocolate, apple, spearmint and lemon balm) are propagating in cutting trays.

It appears that Papalo also loves this climate. When I think a plant may be difficult to grow from seed, i stick a seed or two in random pots that have plants I will be watering any way. I always forget what i've planted this way, until I see it growing later. This is the second year that I've had a papalo plant come up from seed, and the first that,having forgot about planting it, I didn't rip it up thinking it was a weed (which it is, actually).

And let's not forget the giant alliums i have in several places, I can't stand the bare look of a freshly planted bed or container, so I often stick in some left over green onion bulbs, for quick green. Did you know that if you ignore them, they grow to be quite huge plants?

i have a bunch duking it out with parsley now, which was another experimental seeding. The alliums have shared the pot with rock rose (portulaca) for several years. but when it dies back it leaves a bare spot in the winter. I thought the parsley would be a good winter crop there, but birds.squirrels, and insects ate all the seeds except those which fell among the allium roots The plants are literally growing on top of one another, but this promises to be a good insectiary planting, since the parsley is coming into bloom as the alliums are fading. After that, the portulaca will be kick in and be covered with bees.

My baby valerian start has taken off quite well and I hope to be able to grow it easily here. I also have two pots of gotu kola growing inside that I'm trying to force to become potbound so that i can divide it this fall.

Next on my to-be-started list are catnip, catmint, and sage. And I'm going out to buy hairpins, to pin down any runners of anything i see, like tarragon, and yerba buena that look like they might root with some help.

To paraphrase an old high school cheer: Two, four, six, eight! I know how to propagate!

What babies are y'all making?

Jan

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