Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
You don't need a backyard for this garden. Instead, you can take care of your favorite plants right from inside your home.
The benefits to growing your own vegetables and herbs are endless. They’ll save you money. It’s a constantly renewable source of food. They’ll be using up less fossil fuels, transportation ...
If growing herbs outdoors, Stout loves using half-wine barrels because they allow room for up to five 4-inch-pot herbs. This set of two includes a 19.5-inch barrel and a 15-inch barrel, both made ...
Growing herbs hydroponically is considered to be more efficient, and to produce a higher quality product (pg 17), [9] and can be seen in both the small farm and in commercial operations. In contrast, organic farming systems that additional make use of a greenhouse expand the growing season, is a fast growing niche market, and offers monetary ...
Herbs came to be considered in three groups, namely pot herbs (e.g. onions), sweet herbs (e.g. thyme), and salad herbs (e.g. wild celery). [8] During the seventeenth century as selective breeding changed the plants size and flavor away from the wild plant, pot herbs began to be referred to as vegetables as they were no longer considered only ...
The vegetables grown included arugula (rocket), cilantro (coriander), tomatillo, hot peppers, spinach, chard, collards, black kale, berries and lettuce, 25 heirloom seeds and 10 herbs such as anise hyssop and Thai basil, [11] and former presidents' favorite produce plants, such as Thomas Jefferson's preferred "Brown Dutch and Tennis Ball ...
The Sprout holds up to three herb plants at a time and is designed to grow plants up to five times faster than in regular soil. The low-fuss design is easy to use.
Mustard Plant and Butterflies, early or middle Ming dynasty c. 1368–1550. Although some varieties of mustard plants were well-established crops in Hellenistic and Roman times, Zohary and Hopf note, "There are almost no archeological records available for any of these crops."