Making Your Home More Organic With Indoor Herb Gardening
Indoor Container Herb Gardening
It can be a fun hobby or it just be functional, indoor herb gardening definitely has many uses. If you have no idea what indoor herb gardening is, well it’s simply the cultivating and growing of herbs for either medicinal, culinary or ornate purposes inside the home. Indoor herb gardens are for the majority grown in containers which are placed near windows or areas where there is exposure to the sun. Indoor herb gardening has a multitude of benefits and these can include the convenience of having fresh herbs readily available for your kitchen or for your medicinal needs. As a cooking need, the availability of an indoor herb garden in your own kitchen is sometimes indispensable especially if you need herbs all the time.
Guides For Planting Herbs In Containers
In today’s age of instant everything, an indoor herb container garden sometimes becomes a necessity and the good news is that it is actually quite easy to have one. Pots with premeasure soil, seeds and nutrients are being sold in many stores and this makes it easy to have an indoor herb container garden in your own kitchen.
Some tips when planting herbs are to be careful when putting the herb seeds in the soil. Too deep could mean that they won’t grow too well while too shallow or just on top will not allow the roots to have firm grasp of the soil. Indoor herb gardening will need a thin layer of gravel or sandy soil at the bottom of the pot. This will enable drainage for the plant not to be waterlogged. Most herbs do not appreciate too much water left in the pot. Of course, holes at the bottom of the pot will facilitate better drainage. Other preferable prefer to add small pieces of tree bark or chips into the potting mix then do so. This will not only provide better drainage for the pot but will also add to the organic matter in the pot which will be a source of nutrients when it decomposes making your indoor herb gardening effort a success.
You might also want to make sure that the soil in the pot is slightly moist until the seed has germinated. Misting the soil lightly at least two to three times a day should do the trick. Indoor herb gardening requires that the pot be exposed to sunlight for several hours a day. This exposure to sunlight helps to coax the plant out of the seed. Most herbs like a lot of sunlight so don’t hesitate to give them lots.
These simple tips for indoor herb gardening would be useful for many especially for the novice gardeners who would want to try out indoor herb gardening at home. By following the steps above, you will ensure that your efforts in having your very own indoor herb garden will be beneficial to you and ease a lot of your stress.



























