Medicinal Herb Garden

Herbs for the Medicinal Herb Garden

 Plant a medicinal herb garden to have medicinal herbs at your front door!

Growing medicinal herbs is perfect if you like making your own homemade salves, teas, body care products, tinctures, and other medicine.

Many of the medicinal herbs are incredibly easy to grow whether you’re a beginner or advanced gardener or herbalist.

Herbs for the Medicinal Herb Garden

It was my love of Calendula salve that made me want to grow medicinal herbs many years ago.

I read it was an easy herb to start with and I didn’t want to keep buying dried calendula flowers. This got me hooked on growing medicinal herbs and over the years I’ve added more and more

Medicinal Herb Garden Layout

Back then we had a built a herb spiral and many of the herbs that we planted were for medicinal purposes. Below is the diagram of the herbs we planted.

Our first medicinal herb garden we made the mistake of underestimating how large the plants would get later on.

What to plant in a medicinal herb garden- plants for herb spiral

The herb spiral started out as a beautiful garden feature but it quickly became a chaos of herbs spreading and self-sowing.

Herbs for the Medicinal Herb Spiral Garden

Planting a Medicinal Herb Garden

It’s important to think long term when figuring out what medicinal herbs to grow and where to plant them.

Although the plants start out small many are either perennials or self sow easily and can take over an area or grow quite larger in a matter of years. Certain woody herbs can get pruned back if they become too large, others can be rooted up and divided.

Certain herbs like those in the mint family are better grown in pots. Also keep in mind that for many medicinal herbs you might need a larger growing area, depending on what you’re using them for.

I was surprised at how much herbs like chamomile shrunk down when dried and how much I needed for one cup of tea!

Beautiful Chamomile for medicinal tea

You can grow your medicinal herbs from seed or buy seedlings from your local nursery.

Although I grow a lot of medicinal herbs from seed, especially the hard to find ones, there are many that are better purchased already grown. In some cases it’s better to buy 1-2 oregano plants for example, than a pack of 1000 seeds that you won’t need. Many herbs also take many months to grow from seed before they are large enough to transplant, so that adds another perk to buying them.

You can also propagate many herbs from cuttings, so ask friends or family for certain cuttings to reduce the cost of planting your medicinal herb garden.

Medicinal Herbs to Plant in your Herb Garden

Medicinal Herb Garden List

When growing medicinal herbs, make a list of what home, body or healing products you’d like to make with your herbs.

Find out if that herb grows in your area and then create your own list of medicinal herbs to plant. Some will be readily available in seed catalogs, especially ones that are both culinary and medicinal like oregano, sage, thyme etc. Others are harder to find. Here in Canada I purchased many from Salt Spring Seeds.

Here are the medicinal herbs that I’m planting in our herb garden:

  • Calendula
  • Elecampane
  • Oregano
  • Sage
  • Thyme
  • Agastache
  • Chamomile
  • Lemon Balm
  • Spearmint (in pots)
  • Other mints (in pots)
  • Echinacea
  • Astralagus
  • Arnica 
  • Feverfew
  • Yarrow
  • Catnip
  • Lavender
  • Motherwort
  • Codonopsis
  • Evening Primrose
  • Licorice
  • Marshmallow
  • Pleurisy Root
  • St. Johns Wort
  • Valerian

Lemon balm Mint can spread rapidly in the herbal garden

Lemon balm can also spread rapidly as it self-sows easily.

Herbs for the Medicinal Herb Garden

One of my favorite things about growing medicinal herbs is that many of them are a beautiful addition to the garden with blooming fragrant flowers that attract bees and other pollinators.

Sage flowers look like closed roses.

Herbs for the Medicinal Herb Garden

Medicinal herbs in your garden provide flowers for the bees and offer blooming times throughout whole season.

Agastache in bloom

Herbs for the Medicinal Herb Garden

Oregano flowering late in the season Herbs for the Medicinal Herb Garden

Calendula flowers keep blooming even after fall frosts helping the bees before winter.

Herbs for the Medicinal Herb Garden

Chives (more of a culinary herb) are perfect for early spring flowers & nectar

Chives and bumblebee

Some medicinal herbs you shouldn’t harvest until the 3rd year.

Herbs for the Medicinal Herb Garden

Echinacea, and other perennial medicinal herbs that you harvest the roots of, need to establish a strong root system so they keep providing for years to come.

Because the herb spiral turned out to be in too limited in growing space for our medicinal herbs, next time I’m planning on giving them a larger area. I have the following medicinal herbs that I’m planning on growing next spring. This winter I shall be figuring out exactly where to grow each one so that they can become useful for herbal body and healing products for years to come.

Foraging for plantain

List of herbs to grow in a medicinal herb garden #herbalism #herbgardening #herbgarden #medicinalplants

 

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