"montana wildhack" <montana@wildhack.com.invalid> wrote in message
>> "Jo Green" <jo.greengtg@yahoo.com> wrote in message
>>
[quoted text clipped - 13 lines]
> sunlight and drainage. Our basil likes a little shade. Purple basil seems
> particularly prone to sunburn.
I think sunlight and drainage would just about sum up most herbs :-)) I
grow my rosemary under the eaves (dry and sunny). I grow my coriander in a
bed in spring and out of the western sun when summer comes, ditto my basil.
> The rest of the herbs never seem to care where they are as long as the
> soil isn't too wet and there's lots of sun.
>
> Matter of fact, we generally plant herbs in spots where nothing else will
> grow and we don't fertilize or amend soil.
I tend to do the same by popping something into a spot I've just cleared a
crop from. The only exception is my parsley whihc I have rogue patches of
where I have wandered by a seeding plant, grabbed the heads and then just
dropped. My best patch at the moment (it's mid winter here so not a lot of
growth happening) is right next to a fencepost (dry and impoverished). all
the other patches are looking like thye are suffering from too much moisture
or frost.
Herbs have been great
> right next to the driveway, but we have to pay attention that we don't
> step on them or drive over them. Mint is excepted from the above. We drive
> over that regularly. Helps keep it trimmed back, I guess...
:-)) I do grow good mint on our other farm. It's on the south side of the
house and it's raging along. Here I keep it in a pot so it gets enough
moisture.