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herbs that bloom

Herbs can hold their own in the flower garden. There were years when my large and vigorous sage shrub was the only perennial in bloom, delighting me with abundant periwinkle flowers for months while other flowers where nowhere to be found.

Sure, some herbs don’t have show worthy flowers, but all of them bloom and will provide color and fragrance to your garden all season long.

Right now my mixed pot of basil is in bloom; if you love the scent of its leaves, the flowers are twice as fragrant. It looks very pretty in its pot on the patio table, next to the rosemary. The latter will get covered with a veil of blue flowers later in the summer.

If you find the delicate thyme flowers too modest, how about lavender, or yarrow? Or plant tall dill at the back of the border and allow it to develop its very decorative chartreuse umbels: butterflies love them and they’ll make your garden their home. Or plant an apple-scented chamomile lawn, if you have a good spot in the sun.

Did you know the pretty flowers of cooking chives and onions can rival their fancy allium cousins?

I left calendulas for last, because they serve a dual purpose.

Some people plant them instead of marigolds, just because they’re so pretty and free flowering, with no intention to use them medicinally.

Calendulas are cold weather annuals; they stay in bloom until the beginning of December and they weather a frost or two like it’s nothing. The colder the weather, the more colorful they get, in shades of rust, yellow and orange.

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