Snipping fresh, homegrown herbs into your cooking – to add “just that little extra something” – is one of life’s domestic ...
As a perennial, mint dies back to the ground each winter and reemerges in spring. A single mint plant can live for up to five years, but the plant is easily divided, so it can provide a continuous ...
By Barbara Brown When we think of mint it is usually in the context of a flavoring agent for food and drinks. But can it also ...
Herbs enjoy sun all day and need at least six hours of direct sun to produce high amounts of flavorful oils. Many herbs ...
The Mexican mint marigold, the newest Texas Superstar plant, is a hardy, easy-to-grow herb and popular herbaceous ornamental perennial.
Gardeners have been urged to spread mint around their gardens in March or April to eliminate one of their biggest nightmares.