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Growing Kitchen Herbs Fast

Posted By Sheryl - Runningtrails On August 29, 2010 @ 1:03 am In Blog,Herbs & Spices,How To | 8 Comments

I love growing herbs. I have an herb bed where I have been collecting various herbs for a few years now. I have grown herbs from seed, but it is a slow process. One way I have managed to enlarge my herb bed quickly this year is by rooting herbs from the grocery store. I have had fun attempting to root new plants from fresh pieces I purchased at the grocery store for the cost of a package of seeds. Today I bought rosemary and last week I bought and planted tarragon cuttings. Watercress is another one that has been a great success!

When I look through the packages of fresh herbs at the grocery store, I look for pieces that have tiny bits of root still attached. These will need less time to continue rooting and start growing. I am not sure this is root. It could be a piece of the stem that didn’t break away cleanly but I will leave it there, just in case it is a root piece. I don’t know for certain that rosemary stems will root but I will try it anyway. I am not losing anything, as I will still have the pile of leaves that I stripped from the stems. I can continue to cook with those.

The first thing I did was fill a small container with light potting soil. I buy the inexpensive stuff from WalMart for this. It is better for rooting and seeding if you mix it with perlite, but I am not going to at this point, mainly because I don’t have any at the moment.

I use all kinds of containers to plant in. This is the bottom half of a vegetable juice cocktail jug with holes in the bottom. The aluminum foil is to catch the water that runs through when I water it. Dampen the soil with warm water before starting.

I use rooting hormone gel for this. I put a tiny bit in the corner of a throw away plastic thingy (it’s an industry term LOL!). I keep my rooting hormone gel in the fridge. I have read that this gives it a longer life span. I don’t know this from my own experience, but it can’t hurt and it doesn’t take up much room in the fridge.

I leave it in the box so it’s well labeled. (Who knows what those guys will eat if they find it in the fridge!)

Lay out the branches of the fresh herbs. Remove all but a few leaves at the top. One piece was long enough for me to make two rooting pieces out of it with a few leaves left at the top of each one. When this is done, re-cut the bottoms of all except the pieces with a slight root still attached. Leave that alone.

Dip the end of each piece in the bit of rooting hormone. Poke a small hole in the damp soil and insert the end. Fill in the soil around it.

I plant all pieces in one container together. It takes up less room that way and it will be a while before they are so big that they need a pot of their own. Hopefully they will be rooted in time to put them outside before fall comes. If not, they will grow on the kitchen window sill.

These are the tarragon cuttings I rooted a few days ago. They wilted at first but seem to be perking up now. I did not cover these with anything but I am going to put a bag over the rosemary to help keep them moist while they root.

Put the cuttings in a light place but not in direct sunlight until you see real new leaf growth.

I have been using these fresh herbs from my garden this year. One thing I want to make this year is a lot of pesto. There is just so much you can do with fresh herbs!


You can also find Sheryl at Providence Acres.

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