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         Herb Gardening:     more books (100)
  1. Grow 15 Herbs for the Kitchen: Storey Country Wisdom Bulletin A-61 by Sheryl L. Felty, 1983-01-08
  2. Herb Bible by Peter McHoy, Westland P., 1993-06
  3. A Handful Of Herbs: Gardening, Cooking And Decorating by Barbara Segall, Louise Pickford, et all 2005-05-27
  4. Uncommon Scents: Growing Herbs & Spices in Florida by Hank Bruce, 1996-12
  5. Gardening Wizardry for Kids by L. Patricia Kite, Yvette Santiago Banek, 1995-07-01
  6. Country Living Gardener The Successful Herb Gardener: Growing and Using Herbs--Quickly and Easily (Country Living Gardener) by Sally Roth, The Editors of Country Living Garde, 2005-02-01
  7. Beautiful Easy Herbs: How to Get the Most from Herbs-In Your Garden and in Your Home by Laurence Sombke, 2000-01-15
  8. Herbs: Partners in Life: Healing, Gardening, and Cooking with Wild Plants by Adele G. Dawson, 2000-09
  9. Herbs in Pots: Artful and Practical Herbal Containers by Rob Proctor, David Macke, 1999-07
  10. Landscaping with Herbs (Landscaping Series , No 3) by Jim Wilson, 1995-10-25
  11. The Sage Cottage Cookbook, 2nd: Celebrations, Recipes, and Herb Gardening Tips for Every Month of the Year by Dorry Norris, 1995-08-01
  12. The pleasure of herbs: A month-by-month guide to growing, using, and enjoying herbs by Phyllis Shaudys, 1997
  13. Encyclopedia of Herbs & Their Uses by Deni Bown, 1995-09-09
  14. Herb gardening for Washington & Oregon by Marianne Binetti, Laura Peters, 2008-01-15

81. HDRA - In The Herb Garden Now
Lemon balm (Melissa officinalis) Hardy perennial herb with highly scented leaves. Organic lemon balm seed available from the Organic gardening Catalogue.
http://www.hdra.org.uk/todo_now/herb_gard_now.htm
Home Members'area Info Shop Contact us Our gardens Join us Grow organic ... About us
Updated May 27, 2004 June 2004 June is a wonderful month. Perfumes from those herbs that contain essential oils pervade the herb garden, especially when the sun shines. Brightly coloured flowers seem to burst into view, often bedecked with butterflies and bees. Things to do in the herb garden this month Grow French tarragon - find out how in our Herb of the month section
Cowslip
Primula veris Plant out pots of basil and other tender herbs Keep sowing seed outside - to provide continuity of supply Thin seedlings that have been sown direct in the garden Sow seed of cowslip in pots and keep in cold frame Trim shrubby herbs such as cotton lavender and box Hoe and remove weeds regularly as competition will be great this month Plant up containers Cut sage for drying Take softwood cuttings See below
Cornflower Cut cornflowers for drying as the flowers open Gather elderflowers for making syrup and 'champagne' Begin gathering petals of damask rose for drying Lift and divide thymes
Flavour from the garden this month June will offer flavour from just about all the herbs. New shoots, leaves and flowers perfect for the kitchen.

82. A Children's Herb Garden - Planting Tips And Gardening Ideas
Holistic Healing Planting a Children s herb Garden. Whereas raspberries are a wonderful herb source .this prickly plant is not suitable for a child s garden.
http://healing.about.com/library/weekly/aa121297.htm
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Make a 15 by 15 foot circle in an open space....full sun is wonderful for the sunflowers planted around the perimeter of the garden. It will be fun as well as educational for the children to watch the faces of the sunflowers reaching in the direction of the sunlight, also the towering sunflowers will create patches of shade within the circle. Plant a vining plant that will creep up and cover the framed tipi, green peas is an excellent choice. Section off eight to ten segments in the mid section of the circle for various herb plantings.......you may want to leave a couple of the sections bare or covered with mulch as crawl-ways to get to the center tipi. Don't forget, children also like to put things in their mouths.....dirt included. Be sure to select herbs that are completely safe for children. Whereas raspberries are a wonderful herb source....this prickly plant is not suitable for a child's garden.

83. Herb Garden At The Devonian Botanic Garden
The herb Gardens. plant. It gives rise to the adjective herbaceous . In gardening, herbs may also be woody plants. Uses of herbs.
http://www.discoveredmonton.com/devonian/herbgrdn.html
University of Alberta
Devonian Botanic Garden
Home Page About Us What to See and Do Special Events ... AFHE Links
The Herb Gardens
Historical Perspectives Herb Garden Development About Herbs Further Garden Development
Historical Perspectives
The history of man's use of, and relationship to plants, is a long one. During the time of the hunter-gatherer this association was perhaps mystical but most often based on practicality. Plants were used as food, shelter, weapons, and also as religious objects. As agricultural practices evolved smaller areas of land supported larger and larger communities. The most useful plants (domestic, culinary, medicinal, and religious) were brought into cultivation, planted near dwellings and stored. The ancient Persians developed the first true gardens of aromatic plants, culinary herbs and planted trees. In the Persian capital of Nineveh municipal herb gardens were planted for public use. It was between 54 and 68 AD that Pedacius Dioscorides, a Roman army surgeon, wrote his famous herbal. Borrowing from works of Mithridates and others, he wrote four books dealing with 600 best known plants. Between 700 and 1200 AD European monks translated Arabic and Roman scripts concerning herbs into Latin. Secure in their monasteries, and skilled as copyists and horticulturists, they had the opportunity to grow herbs and other plants. Their first herb gardens were medicinal plant gardens (physic gardens). Future physic gardens in the sixteenth century were associated with either apothecaries or universities. Apothecaries wanted the medicinal plants for curative purposes or for barter. In universities plants were grown for purpose of study. The first university garden was established at the University of Padua, in Italy in 1545.

84. Vegetable Gardening In Spring
BASIL Ocimum basilicum a totally indispensable herb for the urban food gardener. of lettuce basil to the tiny leaves of bush basil.For ordinary garden use, the
http://www.naturalhub.com/vegetable_gardening_in_spring.htm
HEALTH, NUTRITION; PRACTICE GROWING YOUR OWN INGREDIENTS GROWING YOUR OWN FOOD-PLANTS GROWING VEGETABLES IN SPRING 'True' Greek Oregano If you are serious about authentic Mediterranean food - or want a superior pizza, you must have the authentic oregano - dried wild Greek oregano flower stems. Not the whole plant. Intense, austere, the taste of the searing Mediterranean sun. Limited quantities of South Pacific organic true Greek 'origini' are available now. Artemis Herbs www.naturalhub.com/artemis/index.html sow in spring, achoccha amaranth vegetable amaranth calaloo ... zuchinni
www.naturalhub.com
summer
autumn winter [DIRECTORIES-BUY GARDEN AIDS] ... [HOME] ACHOCCHA Cyclanthera pedata - Korila, Caygua. A tendrilled, climbing gourd with handsome maple-like leaves, whose pale green, hollow small-cucumber sized fruit are eaten raw or steamed. They are vaguely cucumber/asparagusy, and slightly bitter. This plant needs a long season to produce, and the fruit are ready in autumn and early winter. Sow the seeds in spring, in pots, or in the ground. A long wait for an odd fruit, but, the vine is handsome (until it starts to look scrappy in winter, anyway), and it has 'annoy your friends with the mysteriousness of it' value. Present, but rare, in some Western countries; the seeds are very rarely available. AMARANTH, VEGETABLE

85. Erowid Cannabis Vault : Cultivation #10
GREEN GERMINATION VEGETATIVE GROWTH FLOWERING HYDROPONICS PLANTING OUTDOORS GUERRILLA gardening SOIL GROWING things in life as good as your own herb, grown by
http://www.erowid.org/plants/cannabis/cannabis_cultivation10.shtml
Become a member before June 15th and receive both issue 5 and 6 of our print newsletter
Originally archived by the Hyperreal Drug Archives. Hosted by Erowid as of Oct, 1999.
Last Modified - Thu, Jun 7, 2001 Used by Erowid with permission of author
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(html and design 1995-2004 Erowid.org. Please ask permission before publicly reproducing.)

86. The Herb Society Of America - National Herb Garden
I will always credit my experience in the National herb Garden with focusing my interest in gardening.” –Hannah Flynn, National herb Garden Intern, 2003.
http://www.herbsociety.org/nhg.htm
Home About Us Contact Us Membership ... Search
National Herb Garden
The National Herb Garden was a gift from The Herb Society of America to the American people. It stands as one of the finest examples of how a diverse group of people and organizations working together can achieve a dream. For over twenty years, the National Herb Garden has fulfilled The Herb Society of America’s mission to promote the knowledge, use and delight of herbs. The garden includes hundreds of species and cultivars of herbs used for everything from perfume to cooking to medicine to flower arranging. Every plant is labeled, and interpretive signage helps the visitor understand the herbs in context with their history and use.
Constructed on a two-and-a-half-acre site at the U.S. National Arboretum in Washington, D.C., the garden was completed in 1980 after fifteen years of planning and fundraising by a group of dedicated Society members. In the end, $200,000 was raised by The Society and was matched by a $200,000 grant from the U.S. government.
More than two decades later, The Herb Society of America is still committed to the success of the herb garden. Funds from The Society support a garden intern and HSA members from the area volunteer frequently. Recent enhancements in lighting, irrigation, signage and walking paths keep the garden beautiful and accessible to all.

87. RAISED HERB GARDEN - Newsletter For Gardeners - P. Allen Smith Gardens
Subscribe Sign up now to receive this free newsletter by email. July 25, 2002, gardening Newsletter RAISED herb GARDEN. RAISED herb GARDEN.
http://www.pallensmith.com/newsletter/2002/news_072502b.htm
Sign up now to receive this free newsletter by email. July 25, 2002 Gardening Newsletter -
RAISED HERB GARDEN The Finer Things
Raised Herb Garden
Chicken Breast Stuffed with Prosciutto, Brie and Basil

Allen's Mailbox

Sign up now to receive this free newsletter by email. RAISED HERB GARDEN
M any of us are finding ourselves gardening in smaller spaces these days. So, how about a plan for a small, raised kitchen garden that takes no time to put together and will allow you to enjoy fresh herbs and a few vegetables all through the season? Here are a few tips that will help you pick the right location and set up your herb garden. The location of your kitchen garden is important. Look for a spot that gets plenty of sun and is large enough to accommodate an 8' x 8' wood frame. There are several reasons to use a raised bed. With a raised bed you can create the right soil mixture. This is especially helpful when the soil around your house isn't ideal. Also, by raising the soil in a wooden frame above the surface of the ground, it will actually warm up sooner in the spring. Seeds tend to germinate faster and roots will be stimulated to grow. In the fall, you can cover the bed when temperatures drop and extend the growing season a little longer. The materials you will need are: (4) 2" x 12" boards, 8' long; (12) 2 1/2 wood screws; and (12) 2" x 2' stakes. For your 2" x 12" boards, choose lumber that is untreated and resists rotting such as redwood, cedar, or cypress.

88. Drugstore.com - Potting Shed Creations Garden Makers Culinary Herb Garden
online for Potting Shed Creations Garden Makers Culinary herb Garden at drugstore.com today, where you will find a huge selection of gardening products, in
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89. Herb Guide
Beautiful Easy Herbs How to get the most from herbs in your garden and in your home. GardenGuides Chamomile Times.
http://www.gardenguides.com/herbs/herb.htm
Herb Seeds
Anise

Basil

Borage
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Herbal Remedy Gardens
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The Herb Gardener

GardenGuides Home
... Beautiful Easy Herbs
How to get the most from herbs in your garden and in your home GardenGuides Chamomile Times Seed Shop Book Shop Article Index Forums ... Herb Guide GUIDE SHEETS GUIDE SHEETS : Herbs Agrimony Aloe Angelica Basil Bay Bergamot Borage Buchu Caraway Catnip Cayenne Chamomile Chervil Chives Coriander Dill English Mallow Feverfew Fennel Garlic Goldenrod Hawthorne Hop Horseradish Hyssop Lady's Mantle Lavender Lemon Balm Lemon Verbena Lovage Lungwort Marjoram Mint Mustard Oregano Parsley Pot Marigold Rosemary Rue Sage Scented Geranium Southernwood St. John's Wort

90. Recipes
Cooking with herbs information and recipes.
http://www.amagickgarden.com/pages/amgpages/amgherbcooking.html
Are you carb conscious? Track those carbs with Cooking.com's food scale that calculates the nutritional values of more than 900 foods and ingredients. Simply place a portion on the weighing tray and enter the food code from the instructional booklet. The scale instantly shows the weight and calculates carbohydrates, calories, protein, fat, cholesterol, dietary fiber and sodium. It just got easy for those cooks interested in more healthful eating.
We feature Herbs in the Garden, Herbs in the Medicine Cabinet and Herbs in the Bath. Now we've added Herb Recipes . You and your family will enjoy the added flavors and good eating that comes with cooking with herbs. We work in the garden as often as time and the weather permits. Soon the baskets will fill with the fruits of our labors. What's next? We'll turn that food into some of the best eating using recipes that have come our way. Since ancient times herbs have been cultivated for culinary purposes. Throughout centuries, cooks have developed the art of combining and contrasting the different flavors of herbs to bring out the very best in a favorite dish. The addition of herbs to our diet adds vitamins and healing properties, without weight or richness. Bring potted herbs into the house in Autumn or start your own plants from seeds and set them in a sunny window. This allows you the use of fresh herbs in winter. Dried herbs, your own or purchased, will do nicely in a pinch. Top of Page

91. Gardening Information And Gardening Tips From Doug Green
Articles, columns, FAQs, plant lists for perennials, herbs and water plants.
http://www.simplegiftsfarm.com

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If you are like me, gardening is important in your life. In my case, I think I'm pretty lucky to be able to make my living doing what I love to do. Where else can you get paid to help a hummingbird take a shower? Where taking a nap beside blooming hellebores is a mandatory part of the job? Where fragrance-testing roses is part of the job description? And, where you have to write about all of these things for other gardeners? It's a tough life but somebody has to do it. I love gardening but I love to enjoy it - to laugh about it and to live it. Laughter is delightful in the garden and I hope you share this with me. I also think the garden is a very human place - a place of sweet mystery, an opening to mystical experiences and one of the few places left in our modern lives where we can be who we truly are. The times in my life when I truly relax in my garden - to open myself to the spiritual aspects of outdoor life - are among the most treasured. I share my love of gardening in an informal (free!) newsletter.

92. Medieval New York: Cloisters Herb Garden
Back to Medieval New York Page. The Bonnefont Cloister herb Garden by. The herbs in the Bonnefont Cloister Garden Specific Functions.
http://www.fordham.edu/halsall/medny/herbgdn1.html
Back to Medieval New York Page The Bonnefont Cloister
Herb Garden
by Sarah McGowan
[mcgowan@murray.fordham.edu]
Located in the Cloisters
a branch of the Metropolitan Museum of Art
(in Washington Heights, New York)
The Cloister and Garden Themselves

This cloister dates from the late thirteenth or early fourteenth century, containing capitals and some columns from the Cistercian abbey at Bonnefont-en-Comminges and other local religious foundations in the south of France. The simplicity of these capitals reflects the strict asceticism embodied by the Cistercian monastic order, shunning any decoration which might distract monks from the contemplation of God. The naturalistic floral patterns decorating the double capitals in this cloister are a reaction in form to the robust, grotesque figures of Romanesque cloister carvings. The individual raised planting beds, wattle fences, and central wellhead of the garden are all characteristics typically found in medieval monastic gardens. The herb garden in the Bonnefont cloister contains more than 250 species of plants which were grown during the Middle Ages. Its design is typical of a medieval monastery garden plan, but no attempt was made to replicate any one monastic garden in particular. Many medieval sources were referenced to ensure that the choice of plants was historically accurate. The raised beds, wattle fences, and central wellhead are features of a medieval garden. Even the fruit trees outside the south wall are in character, because monasteries were often surrounded by orchards. Plants not hardy in New York City's climate, such as aloe, lemon, and bay, are grown in decorative pots which can be moved inside in the winter, a common gardening practice in northern Europe throughout the late Middle Ages. The plants are all labeled according to their uses.

93. Herbalism, Medieval, Magickal And Modern
Medieval and Renaissanc use of herbs and spices, medieval and renaissance gardening, a booklist of related sources, and a list of links on the topic.
http://www.lehigh.edu/~jahb/herbs/herbs.html
Aunt Bunny's Herbal Safety Rant
; this is NOT a medical advice site!
Class Handouts, Articles, Documentation, etc.
(Primarily directed at Society for Creative Anachronism members- by Jadwiga Zajaczkowa/Jenne Heise)
Class Handouts
Making Herbal Preparations
An outline of instructions for creating various basic herbal preparations
Scents of the Middle Ages
A handout for a class on various uses of scented materials in the Middle Ages
Making Medieval-style Scented Oils and Waters
A handout and background for a hands-on class.
Making Medieval Mustards
Class notes: medieval mustard recipes, instructions on making your own mustard from scratch.
Spices from the East
Class handout for a class on spices, last updated 2/11/01
Local Spices: Savory Seeds in The Middle Ages
This companion to the Spices from the East handout discusses the use of herb seeds that could be grown in Northern Europe in medicine, seasoning, etc.
Medieval and Renaissance Gardens
Handout for a class on medieval/renaissance garden design. Outline with quotes, bibliography.
Women and Medicine in the Middle Ages and Renaissance
An overview of both 'women's medicine' and women practicing medicine in the period. Bibliography.

94. The Gardener's Net: Herb Gardens
herbs and herb Gardens. herbs are essential ingredients for flavoring and spicing up recipes all over the world. herb gardens are fun and easy to grow.
http://www.gardenersnet.com/herbs/
Amazon.com Search for:
Growing Herbs

Herbs- Cooking
Herbs and Herb Gardens
Herbs are essential ingredients for flavoring and spicing up recipes all over the world. Without them, eating would be pretty bland. Herbs add flavor, character, and uniqueness to recipes. Used alone or in combination, they help to make cooking fun and enjoyable, and eating a sheer joy! Varieties: There are a wide variety of herbs which you can use. Depending on who is counting, there are 40 to 60 different kinds of herbs. Each one has it's own distinct flavoring. Most are easy to grow. There are annuals, perennials and even biennials. With that many herbs, there should be lots or uses, right!?! Absolutely! Listed below are the different categories of herbs. Note, many fall into two or more categories. Aromatic- Grown for their scent, aromatics herbs are used in flower vases or dried arrangements. Their oils are used in perfumes, candles, and toiletries to name a few. A couple of favorites are Lavender and Mint. Culinary- We think of this category of herb first and foremost. Most gardeners grow a few or several varieties. Needless to say, food would be plain and boring without this group of herbs. Some of the more popular include Basil, Chives and Dill.

95. Monthly Gardening Tips
Tips for caring for herbs on a monthly basis.
http://www.ext.vt.edu/cgi-bin/WebObjects/Docs.woa/wa/getcat?cat=ir-ln-hb-gt

96. Topica Email List Directory
A place to discuss the art of gathering and using herbs and plants. Nature Crafting and natural gardening.
http://www.topica.com/lists/wildcrafting/
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97. Pauls Garden World
Paul Owen's compendium of practical instructions for growing fruit, vegetables and herbs and garden construction projects, with information on pests and diseases and a weekly diary of gardening jobs.
http://www.powen.freeserve.co.uk/

98. Greenline-
Sign up for eNews. A Kitchen (Barrel Half) herb Garden. This is the perfect size herb garden for city dwellers and/or beginners. If
http://www.urbanext.uiuc.edu/greenline/98v2/gl9806.12.html

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A Kitchen (Barrel Half) Herb Garden
This is the perfect size herb garden for city dwellers and/or beginners. If you have a balcony, deck or small porch this garden can work for you. It may not have all of the herbs you want, but it certainly will have the important ones to provide the fresh taste of herbs to enhance your summer cooking. First decide which herbs you want to plant. Purchase small transplants from a nursery. Select plants without blossoms and avoid long, tall, leggy plants. Do not plant mint or dill (they tend to overtake the other plants) unless you use a separate barrel half. For a pesto garden you may want to plant 8 sweet basil plants and 2 parsley plants. For a grilling garden, plant 1 rosemary plant, 2 parsley plants, 2 lemon thyme plants, 2 chive plants and 1 sweet marjoram plant. A half barrel will hold 8 to 10 transplants, leave 2 to 3 inches between plants and if it gets too crowded, thin by pulling up entire plants to use for cooking. An all purpose garden should consist of 1 chive plant (perennial), 2 parsley plants, 1 rosemary plant, 2 to 3 basil plants, 2 to 3 thyme plants, 2 sweet marjoram or Greek oregano plants. This will be a beautiful, fragrant garden, so be sure to place the barrel outside of your kitchen door or on a sunny deck by a window you can open.

99. The Wise Gardener
Tropical gardening site originating in South Florida combining humor with information on palms, cacti and succulents; cooking with herbs and spices and garden decorating tips.
http://www.thewisegardener.com/
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BIRD OF PARADISE? PALM TREES? TROPICAL BREEZES?
THEY'RE ALL INSIDE @:
thewisegardener.com!
ENTER HERE!

100. Black Magic By Madame!
Offers personalised charms and spells using knowledge of herbs plants, crystals, runic symbols and essential oils as well as ideas to help incorporate magick with cooking and gardening.
http://madame.faithweb.com/blackmagic.html

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