Working on the Herb Garden

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Our little herb garden just outside of the back door had too much sun and not enough water this summer.

This morning some of the children and I did some weeding and mulching to start putting the space back into shape.

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That mulched area was full of plants back in spring and early summer, but there were multiple casualties. The heat killed the lemon balm, the mint, the chives, the lamb’s ear, the strawberries and probably a half-dozen other plants.

Here’s that space back on June 6th of this year:

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Here’s another angle, taken this morning:

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And here’s that area back in June:

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The African blue basil has become a big bush now, though the dahlia, dill, lavender and mullein bit the dust.

We know what can take the heat now!

Here you can see the African blue basil with Mimosa pudica and a daisy I transplanted from a parking area near our church in Pensacola:

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The little lion’s ear (Leonotis leonurus) we planted in spring is now nice and big:

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It’s about to bloom:

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Here’s a view over the herb garden into the area where we planted sunn hemp a couple of months ago:

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That is a terrible cover crop, considering how incredible sunn hemp normally grows. It should be taller than a man, and very thick and green – yet the heat and drought were incredible. Still, we’ll get some nitrogen and biomass from it. It’s amazing it grew at all.

Two weeks ago my friend James helped me move our bathtub worm bin into the garden area where we’ll get more use from the “worm tea.”

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Before moving it, I harvested 25 gallons of worm castings! 20 of them went into the 3′ x 30′ bed we made for our fall daikon plot, and the last 5 gallons we gave to James’ wife Holly for her gardening projects.

Now that the bucket is right by the garden, we can easily mix some with water to use as a tonic for sad plants.

Also, here’s another look at the Mimosa pudicaherbgarden september 2023 8 - Survival Gardening

I really don’t know why we’re growing this stuff except that it’s amazing to watch it shrink away when you touch it.

It’s cousin Mimosa invisa was a terrible weed down in Grenada. It looked the same as M. pudica but had horrible thorns which made it very difficult to weed. This plant is not nearly that thorny. I’ve thought about planting it around the base of a fruit tree as a nitrogen-fixing ground cover, though I’m not sure if it will live through winter.

I had a vision of our herb garden being a beautiful mass of green by the end of the year but the sun was just relentless.

I think we’re going to have to add some shade for this next year. Perhaps we’ll put in some trellises and/or some small fruit trees.

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