Potted Herbs Make Great Indoor Accents
To keep our test garden growing strong through the winter, we’ve moved some of our favorite herb plants indoors. Our sun porch has become a haven for potted herbs and one of our favorite places to take a break or eat our lunches. Read more to find out what we’re growing inside this winter and how you, too, can enjoy potted herbs in your home.
Indoor Herb Plants: Don’t Go… Grow!
This past weekend was spent preparing my 12 favorite herbs for their trip back indoors. All spring, summer and into fall, they have enjoyed a life...
Why Are Native Plants So Important For Your Garden?
With over 35 years of growing plants under our belts, we began to focus on herbs in 2008. We'd always loved growing them, but honestly, the demands...
Haunted Herbs
It’s Halloween and on this macabre Monday we have a few harrowing tales about some of your most beloved plants! Many people are led to believe that the plants they’ve come to know in their gardens and greenhouses are innocent, unassuming herbs and flowers, but some of these commonplace plants have wicked reputations throughout history.
The Little Green Man Who Invaded Our Office
There was some commotion this morning as our Marketing Director, Caroline, found that she wasn’t alone in the bathroom…
We're Giving Our Greenhouses A Facelift!
Wondering why we’re changing out the plastic roofs of our three main greenhouses? The benefits are actually twofold.
Bays Require Patience, But Are Worth The Wait
Bays are one of our favorite herbs to grow, as well as one of our most popular products for obvious reasons. To fully appreciate how hard these wonderful plants are to cultivate and how special they are to own, we want to give you a glimpse at the early life cycle of the Bay.
Comfrey: The Next Generation
We harvested seeds from our own comfrey plants here on the farm, and look at them now!!
Keep Your Felines Frisky With Fresh Catnip Year Round
Being the resident “crazy cat lady”, our Marketing Director Caroline, rescued two flats of Catnip this past season that were past their prime for selling and were bound for the compost pile. Here’s her experience with biting off more than you can plant and finding a great way around it!