Herb Garden Hanging Baskets

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Herb Garden Hanging Baskets Keeps Culinary Herbs Nearby

Herbs bring flavor and aroma to our foods. Keeping them in herb garden hanging baskets ensures these culinary necessities are always within easy reach.  In fact, growing herbs in hanging baskets combines beauty with function. Consider keeping your delicious edibles reachable, year-round.

Tips for Choosing Your Herb Garden Hanging Baskets

Pick something that will hold up to great weight, steady dampness, winds, and continued use for your hanging baskets or containers. You need to be able to bring the hanging bushel down for support, pruning, and wellbeing checks. You’ll need something large enough for your plants, yet of manageable size.  Wire baskets work well, and look particularly great with spices. Other materials also show off your herbs well, such as pottery, wood, or even designed plastic. When possible, use sphagnum greenery, coco-fiber, or other natural materials to line the crate.

You might choose a huge wicker basket with a handle. If a basket isn’t made for hanging, purchase hooks and chains, and other needed equipment. Likewise, consider adding a hook made for fishing-they come in all sizes- and join it to the chain. However, ensure that you hang your plants and container to something that is able to bear the needed weight. Imagine the disappointment if your lovely herb plants should drop and splatter on the floor.  

Some of my personal top choices for hanging planters are these.

 

Locate Your Herbs For Convenience, too.

Some people keep their herb garden hanging baskets or pots on the patio or deck, just outside the kitchen. When weather permits, this allows you to grow more plants and still keep them close enough for ease of use.

However, if your weather doesn’t permit year-round outside gardening, consider a location inside your kitchen. Some people find that hanging them over the sink makes watering and caring for them even easier. Moreover, you find using your kitchen-grown plants much easier and more convenient.

Whether you choose outside or inside for your herbs, ensure that caring for them is convenient and easy. Hanging them over your outside kitchen grill might seem perfect. That is until the grill heat ruins your tender plants. Or until someone overwaters the plants onto the grill.

Consider Weight, too

Also, remember that a basket or pot filled with soil and plants weighs more than it appears. You need to hang them in strong support. That quarter-inch curtain rod over the sink soon bends and breaks under the weight of your beautiful herb plants.

Generally, your herbs want some sunlight. Most do well with indirect light, though some do prefer direct. Few flourish in a dark corner, though some might adjust to less light than others. Consider your varieties when determining the placement.

If the best place you find to hang them lacks adequate light, you have the option of adding a full-spectrum plant light. These inexpensive lights make it possible to have plants almost anywhere in your home.

Overall, consider the placement for ease of use and ability to get to the plants to care for them and to use them in your cooking and baking. Will they grow well where you plan to keep them? Can you access them easily? And of course, do they fit well into the decor of that area, even adding visual appeal?  

 

Don’t neglect your Hanging Herb baskets Gardens:

Like most plants, herbs require some feeding during the spring, summer, and into fall. They might rest over the more dormant winter months. But they still require watering throughout the year.

Pruning your herb plants might consist mainly of using the clippings for cooking and baking. Imagine keeping your plants in tip-top shape just by using them in your recipes!

However, if you have more pruning than you need for culinary projects, you might try drying or freezing the extras for when you need more than you have. This helps to balance your herb needs year-round.

Another option for those extra clippings: grow new plants! These might add to your own collection, replace older plants, or gift them to family and friends.

Although we prune the herbs to use in cooking, pruning also benefits the plant in another way. Unpruned, they often grow leggy and flimsy. They also lose or change the quality flavors. Keep them pruned for their health and yours!  

Growing Herbs in Hanging Baskets:

An amazing method to develop herbs is by planting them in hanging baskets that find vitality in the full sun. Your herbs baskets garden can be dangled from an arbor & pergola over a deck, or put outside your pantry doors where reaping is as simple as opening the door or window and cutting new greenery for your dinner.

Planting a basket of herbs seems a lot like planting any other houseplant. And in fact, they are houseplants or patio plants. Utilize a decent gardening soil blend that drains well yet also contains natural material that will hold some dampness. Add fertilizer when planting. Line your baskets with greenery or a bit of other texture before adding gardening soil. This will both shield the crate and keep soil from washing through the container when you water.

The bigger the hanging container you use, the more various kinds of herb plants you can fill in it. Similar standards utilized for making elaborate blooming pots apply to a herb basket. When planted along these lines, however, herbs can dry out somewhat unless you are cautious. 

However, containers big enough for multiple plants necessarily weigh more, too. Make sure your plant hook and the place it attaches to will handle the weight.

 

Tips For Growing Herbs in Hanging Baskets

  1. Pick herbs that don’t grow excessively wide or tall. Chives, basil, lavender, parsley, mint, rosemary, and thyme are good choices.
  2. Plant lights help indoor plants. They should be set near the plants and kept on for around 10 hours/day, to compensate for their absence of sunlight. Note that if you are beginning from seed, the lights should be kept about 2″ to 3″ from the highest point of the developing holder until the seeds emerge. Then, raise the lights a little at a time, step by step until you are ready to relocate. If you keep the light raised too high over young seedlings, it will make them leggy with weak stems.
  3. Clip and utilize your plants regularly to urge them to develop full and strong plants. When the plants near 6 inches tall, begin to utilize your spices. The more you cut, the bushier they’ll turn into.
  4. Never trim the foliage excessively. Over pruning puts pressure on the plant and might allow disease to infect them.
  5. Start seeds or cuttings when your plants begin to show signs of wearing down. No plant lives forever and numerous spices, similar to basil and dill, are annual plants that attempt to go to seed as they mature. As they reach this stage, the flavors also suffer. Rather than battling it, simply replace them with new plants.

 

Best herbs for Hanging Baskets: 

Choose plant varieties that you will use for cooking, remedies, or aromatic enjoyment. While most herbs grow well in containers, the best type for your home includes those that you truly want and enjoy. Some of the more popular choices for growing herbs in hanging baskets include these:

  • Dill
  • Parsley
  • Thyme
  • Sage
  • Lavender
  • Mint
  • Rosemary
  • Oregano
  • Basil
  • Chives
  • Marjoram

 

Conclusion

Growing herbs in hanging baskets or pots provides many benefits. In addition to the lovely aroma and decor, they prove useful cooking and health, too.  Why not try adding herb garden hanging baskets to your home?  

Read More

Best Plants for Hanging Baskets

Indoor Garden Herbs

Decorate with Houseplants

Best Plants for Your Kitchen

Can Houseplants Go Outside in Summer?

What Spices go Well with Vegetables? (VeganGlobetrotter)

 

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