Perennial Herbs vs. Annual Herbs

Growing perennial herbs means you plant them once and they come back year after year. However, they’re only going to come back each year if you know how to properly care for them. Learn how to prune herbs and tend to the soil for maximum growth each year, then learn how to harvest herbs and use herbs for natural home remedies.

While keeping an herb garden is a great way to eliminate one more thing that we have to rely on the stores to provide, the fragrance and blossoms provide beauty for the eye that is worth the care all on its own. I love growing a year’s worth of vegetables in my garden (and coming up with a plan to preserve it all), a year’s worth of berry plants in my yard, and raising a year’s worth of meat on our property for my family of four.

Thankfully, both culinary and medicinal herbs are easy to grow, easy to maintain, and can provide an endless bounty when cared for properly, meaning you can easily grow a year’s worth of herbs for both cooking and countless medicinal uses.

It’s important to note the difference between perennial herbs that have a woody stem and those herbaceous herbs like basil, oregano, cilantro, lemon balm, mint, etc. that do not have woody stems and may not survive the winter months.

Those herbaceous plants that do survive year after year simply need to be brushed off and cleared of any dead leaves or branches, but may also benefit from dividing and transplanting, soil amendment and shaping. Typically speaking, these plants don’t need actual “pruning” though.

Those that don’t survive the winter can oftentimes be seed saved and replanted, or, if the plant was allowed to go to seed in the fall, may re-seed themselves year after year, as the case with chamomile.

Both perennial herbs and annual herbs can provide you with a never-ending supply if properly maintained. Watch the video below, and read the post for properly pruning herbs and maintaining them for maximum yield and harvest.

You can also watch the video where I planted this herb garden from seed.

Each year, perennial herbs like lavender, rosemary and thyme will die back in the fall and need to be pruned in early spring, ideally while the plant is still dormant.

This looks a bit different for each herb (watch the video above to see how I prune each different herb), but all perennial herbs will benefit from being pruned back and shaped.

As the plants mature they will grow outwards and will benefit from regular pruning each year, as well as a light pruning throughout the summer months as you harvest herbs for use.

To prune herbs, you’re actually just removing the previous year’s dead herbs. But not all herbs like to be pruned completely back to the ground.

Before you just start cutting away, take a look at the plant to see if there is any new growth coming up from the base, or if any of the previous stems from last year are producing new green leaves.

While pruning, this is a great opportunity to shape and maintain the size of growing plants.

If your plants are still small, you may not need to shape them yet. However, well established plants can easily take over a space, or begin to compete for space in a smaller garden area.

You can often divide plants and transplant them to other areas of your yard, or gift them to friends and neighbors looking to start or expand their own herb gardens.

To shape a plant, try to imagine the shape you’d like to achieve, and prune in a manner that the new growth will mimic. It’s better to prune back to green healthy growth and maintain a bushy plant, rather than let it get leggy or overly long and spindly.

For some herbs, this isn’t possible as you’re actually cutting back all growth. For these plants, you want to simply consider their size and whether they should be divided.

When planting an herb garden, it’s important to leave ample space between plants as they’ll continue to grow and expand year after year.

If plants are beginning to encroach on each other, it’s time to divide and transplant, or divide and give away.

Sometimes I need to expand my beds if my herb bushes are getting too close to the surrounding grass (I like my herbs more than my grass anyway!).

To do this I take a square, flat headed shovel and simply cut straight down through the soil to sever any grass roots. I then dig up the top layer of soil and remove it, then amend and fill in the space with compost and mulch.

We don’t want our herbs having to compete with weeds. Early spring is a great time to get into our gardens and pluck any weeds just starting to grow as they’re much easier to remove before they set larger roots.

Once weeds are removed, adding a layer of compost and mulch can help to prevent weeds from returning. Or, it can at least suppress their growth causing them to come back more slowly.

As mentioned above, when your herbs get too big for their space, you can easily transplant them to another area of your yard or give them to a friend.

This is the beauty of perennials! You should never have to buy them again. And, if you’re patient, you can have enough to fill your yard, plus the yards of your friends and neighbors.

After you’ve pruned your herbs, divided and shaped the plants, and weeded the ground, it’s time to give those herbs some nutrients.

Think of your herbs much like you would the vegetables you grow in the garden. You need to give them proper food and nutrition in order for them to produce and give back the flavor and nutrition you’re hoping for.

Adding a layer of compost each year will provide the plants with the nutrients needed to grow big and strong.

And because we’ve now spent all this time making our herbs nice and happy, let’s make ourselves nice and happy by adding a layer of mulch which will help with water retention and weed control!

You can add mulch right up to the roots of well established herbs. But for those herbs that get cut all the way back, I’d leave 3-4 inches around the base of the plant to allow the herbs to grow back easier.

For those herbs that re-seed themselves, you don’t want to cover that area with mulch as those tiny seeds need to get as much sunlight as possible. A thin layer of compost around them is sufficient to help them grow.

Melissa K. Norris inspires people’s faith and pioneer roots with her books, podcast, and blog. Melissa lives with her husband and two children in their own little house in the big woods in the foothills of the North Cascade Mountains. When she’s not wrangling chickens and cattle, you can find her stuffing Mason jars with homegrown food and playing with flour and sugar in the kitchen.

Lindy

2 weeks ago

I live in apartment and don’t have access to a yard. How do I plant and grow herbs in my home?

Melissa Norris

2 weeks ago

A sunny windowsill or you could use a grow light in an area of your apartment if you don’t have a grow light but a southern facing window during the summer should work.

Kathryn

2 weeks ago

Looks like you need to sharpen your clippers! 🙂

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Copyright 2021 – Melissa K. Norris Pioneering Today LLC

Perennial Herbs vs. Annual Herbs

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