Plant some fun by creating your own living pantry. We’ve got some great ideas to inspire your garden.
For the beginning gardener, herbs are friendly and incredibly adaptable. To thrive, most herbs simply need a well-lit area, sufficient water, humidity and protection from drafts and extreme temperature. Given those, herbs can flourish almost anywhere—in pots, in vegetable beds, even tucked around flowers as borders.
The first step in creating your own cook’s garden is deciding where to plant.
Indoors
Growing your herbs indoors puts delicious dishes a fingertip away. Kitchen window sills exposed to full sunlight make excellent sites for simple pots or boxes; add flourish by using hanging baskets, adding shelves and positioning climbing herbs around the window frame. Plant a culinary spice you most often use—parsley, chives, thyme—or choose an array. Herbs love to be grouped together to benefit from the humid microclimate they create. Mint does well indoors because it requires less light. And don't limit yourself to the kitchen. The right herb can add zest to any room: try a tiny pot of peppermint in the bathroom, calming lavender in the bedroom, or lemon verbena in the entrance hall.
Balconies & Patios
An herb garden can turn a patio or apartment balcony into a private paradise, but you must maximize the small space. Think multi-tiered. Use barrels, urns and troughs on the floor, interlocking pots on the wall and creeping vines over the top of trellises and between bricks. If the space receives light only some of the day, try herbs that require partial shade, like chervil, parsley, sorrel, and mint. In darker spaces, you may want to use white tiles or a white wall to intensify the light. Roof plants must be protected from the wind with proper screening; rosemary and lavender are tougher than most herbs, but even they become gnarled in a high wind. And make sure you anchor everything down—including soil (a topping of gravel chips works wonders).
Backyards
Planning a garden outdoors takes substantial forethought. Before choosing a site, spend time on the land watching how the sun falls; a slope receiving direct sunlight for 5 to 6 hours a day is ideal. Also, mark where corners are sheltered and where the soil gets waterlogged. Something else you will want to consider is irrigation—you might want to install a drip irrigation system to avoid dragging a hose around. Once you pick the site, think design: formal geometric patterns like a diamond, square, or wheel bed versus an informal profusion of color and species. Either way, take care that neighbouring plants don't run each other over by considering leaf size, growth patterns, and need for light and shelter. A reasonable guide that lets Mother Nature take its proper course is one plant per square foot or ten per square yard.












