Search Results for: Clover seeds
plants. when organic gardening, don't plant monocultures. if you're planting a lawn, use many different species of grass and even some clover. for a hedge, create a windrow of several different species of plants rather than just using a row of cedars. plant things that grow low, medium, tall, climbing
plants. when organic gardening, don't plant monocultures. if you're planting a lawn, use many different species of grass and even some clover. for a hedge, create a windrow of several different species of plants rather than just using a row of cedars. plant things that grow low, medium, tall, climbing...
https://www.smilinggardener.com/introduction/conservation-of-plants-and-animals-and-microorganisms/
, inflammation of the eyes, insect stings and bites, muscle sprains and strains, leg pains and aching feet, poison ivy or nettle rash, and hemorrhoids. the young leaves can be added to salads, made into soup, added to stirfry, or generally used like spinach. the older leaves can become bitter. the seeds
, lavender spikes, thyme, dill -although it requires tweezers - monarda, ginkgo leaves, maple seeds, oh it goes on, and on..... certainly the best ones have veins, texture, and/or deeper sorts of structure. wispier plants like southernwood are very pretty, while violet leaves would wind up being a large...
http://theessentialherbal.blogspot.com/2005/07/
, inflammation of the eyes, insect stings and bites, muscle sprains and strains, leg pains and aching feet, poison ivy or nettle rash, and hemorrhoids. the young leaves can be added to salads, made into soup, added to stirfry, or generally used like spinach. the older leaves can become bitter. the seeds
, lavender spikes, thyme, dill -although it requires tweezers - monarda, ginkgo leaves, maple seeds, oh it goes on, and on..... certainly the best ones have veins, texture, and/or deeper sorts of structure. wispier plants like southernwood are very pretty, while violet leaves would wind up being a large...
https://theessentialherbal.blogspot.com/2005/07/