0

Chard

Sun or light shade. A leafy green vegetable, often with brightly colored neon stalks. In Texas chard is often used as a winter annual, alongside other ornamentals. Depending on conditions, it may [...]

0

Kale

Sun. Kale is a cool-season leafy green vegetable with high nutritional value. It’s considered much closer to the original wild form of cabbage, but unlike domesticated cabbage, kale’s [...]

0

Fennel

Dappled shade or morning sun. Evergreen, with feathery, threadlike leaves on tall, hollow stems. Umbels of tiny yellow flowers appear with warm weather. \n\nA soft-textured perennial in any herb [...]

0

Basil

Full sun; a warm-season annual with a sweet, pungent flavor. Widely used in Italian and Asian dishes. The aroma adds magic to any outdoor space in summertime.\r\n\r\nBasil requires consistent [...]

0

Comfrey

Partial sun. Long-lived and enduring. An herbaceous perennial with a tidy mound of foliage and big, feltlike borage leaves. Like few other garden plants, comfrey’s is considered nearly [...]

0

Chives

Bright shade or part sun. Semi-evergreen in warm winters, though most years it will freeze to the ground. Cut back to 2-3\” as needed to refresh tired foliage. The hollow leaves are edible [...]

0

Cilantro

Full sun. A cool-season parsley with a fresh citrus-like taste; try growing it outside from mid-November to mid-March. The leaves are widely used in many Latin American and Asian dishes. [...]

0

Hoja Santa

Best in shade; in sun it will wither, but recovers with every rainfall. A big, herbaceous perennial with large, heart-shaped leaves and knotty stems forming spreading clumps during the warm [...]

0

Dill

Full sun to very light shade; a short-lived, cool-season annual in South Texas, growing from October to early April; white flowers appear in umbels. Like other parsleys, dill is a larval host for [...]

0

Yarrow

Sun/partial shade; a perennial herb with fine, feathery, fern-like foliage. Flowers in late spring and early summer in a variety of colors. Each plant may spread up to 3 feet. Traditionally used [...]

page 1 of 3