Planting Wormwood
lavendeldame
14 years ago
Featured Answer
Sort by:Oldest
Comments (8)
lavendeldame
14 years agowitchsbrew
14 years agoRelated Discussions
here's my updated trade list
Comments (3)Hello! I have a question, do you trade for SASE or just other seeds? You are the first person I have came across that has heirloom seeds. I have been doing research about heirlooms and would like to grow a small garden of them. Please let me know! Thank you Ruth...See MoreHAVE: wormwood seeds !
Comments (3)would love to have some of your seeds. If you still have some. I live in florida, Jacksonville to be exact. Let me know the details. Thanks Sam amberhawkx3@yahoo.com...See MoreRoman Wormwood Cultivation
Comments (11)Would you happen to be able to spare a cutting of your plant? I live in the City and I produce my own absinthe as well. I have been looking for dried/fresh A. Pontica for a few months now to round out my coloring. Cut and sifted herbs are just that: the herbs are chopped and the stems and leaves are sifted to drop out powdery remains to give a weight to just the cut product. Have you been able to find A. Pontica variety as dried? I often will receive A. Absinthim as this is the one variety that herb retailers will distribute....See MoreHerbs for cottage garden in SA
Comments (4)I'll make some suggestions if you like. Space out some perennial herbs for starters, low ones at the front of the beds, thyme, winter savory, lemon savory, chives. Then some taller perennial herbs like oregano, margoram, golden margoram, calamint, sage etc. Then at the back or in the middle of the bed taller things like your rosemary, wormwood, lemon verbena, rue, a bay tree (essential) etc. This will give you an all year round base which you can plant around with annual things like fennel, dill, parsley, basil, etc. A herb garden run like this will self seed many annual herbs so once you have them you don't need to buy them again, you just move the little seedlings around and pull out the ones you don't need. I've only listed european-ish type culinary herbs. If you're into medicinal plants or asian culinary herbs you could incorporate those. things like lemongrass and curry leaf tree form a good perennial base for an asian herb garden. Or mix it all up, it's up to you. Keep plants lke rosemary and lavendar well pruned so they are compact and neat. If you spend a bit of time trimming and shaping your herb garden it'll look beautiful. things like wormwood can get out of control and smother other things. Have fun!!!...See Morenovice_2009
13 years agohouseplantlover86
13 years agoPamCinMO
12 years agoWild Haired Mavens
8 years agoKylee White
8 years ago
Related Stories
GARDENING GUIDESGreat Design Plant: Antennaria Neglecta
Plant field pussytoes in midwestern and eastern U.S. rock gardens for early-spring flowers and silver foliage
Full StoryGARDENING GUIDESGreat Garden Combo: 3 Wonderful Plants for a Deer-Resistant Screen
Protect your privacy and keep deer at bay with a planting trio that turns a problem garden area into a highlight
Full StoryGARDENING GUIDESGreat Design Plant: Gaura Lindheimeri
Delicate, butterfly-shaped flowers ‘float’ above the foliage of this lovely, drought-tolerant perennial
Full StoryGARDENING GUIDES5 Easy Plants for a Romantic Entry Garden
Abundant flowers, a heady fragrance and striking foliage combine for a romantic front-yard garden that's deceptively low maintenance
Full StoryGARDENING FOR BUTTERFLIESGreat Design Plant: Lungwort
Yes, the name is unfortunate. But the flowers and foliage are delightful, and this perennial is easy to grow and shunned by deer
Full StoryGARDENING FOR BUTTERFLIESGreat Design Plant: Thunder and Lightning for Midsummer Garden Color
Get over the mouthful of a name; focus on the dramatic foliage and gorgeous magenta flowers of Thunder and Lightning field scabious
Full StoryGARDENING GUIDESGreat Design Plant: Glossy Abelia for Year-Round Beauty
Fragrant flowers, burgundy foliage and hummingbird allure. Deer shun this shrub, but it's a 5-star performer you'll love
Full StoryPLANTING IDEASGreat Garden Combo: Silver Sparkles Amid Purple and Blue Foliage
Get the look of this modern foundation planting by focusing on a restrained color palette with tasteful accents
Full StoryGARDENING GUIDESMonochromatic Garden Magic Done 7 Ways
Discover intriguing ways to use color in your garden by unlocking the secrets of monochromatic design
Full StoryGARDENING GUIDESNortheast Gardener's August Checklist
It's hot in the August garden! Cool off with airy grasses and tactile plants that catch the breeze
Full StorySponsored
lavendeldameOriginal Author