Herb Thyme English Winter Seeds
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Herb Thyme English Winter Seeds

Herb Thyme English Winter Seeds

Thyme English Winter, also known as Common or Garden Thyme, is a hardy evergreen perennial and has small aromatic dark green leaves with clusters of small pale pink flowers. Thyme English Winter (Thymus vulgaris) can be picked all year round and is the classic herb used in 'bouquet garni'.

It is great for stuffings, chicken dishes and stews and is easy to grow from seed and reaches a height & spread of 30cm. The flavour is at it's best from June to July and it does well with freezing & drying or infusing in oil.

Thyme English Winter is a great companion plant and deters cabbage root-fly from cabbages, cauliflowers and brussels sprouts but the flowers also attract many beneficial insects to the garden.

Thyme English Winter Herb Seed Information

Seed Quantity: Approx 500 seeds per pack.
Site:
Sunny, well-drained incorporate grit if tendency to be wet.
When to Sow
March to May or August to September.
How to Sow:
The seed is very fine so mix some with horticultural sand to make it easier to handle. Sprinkle seed thinly on seed trays but cover the seed very very lightly or not at all. Place ideally in a heated propagator or cover with a polythene bag and keep at 20C. The seed should germinate in 2 weeks. Transplant into small pots when large enough. (Thyme can be multi-sown onto a plug tray to avoid the pricking out stage). When thyme plants are about 10cm tall, 'harden off' for 3-4 days & transplant to garden or container when the risk of frost has passed. Plant herbs 30cm apart and add grit to the planting hole if the soil is not light.
Care:
Be careful to keep watering to a minimum as seedlings are prone to 'damping off' and always water from the bottom. Thyme is a woody perennial so after 3 years it will need dividing to encourage fresh vigour and after 5 years it will probably need replacing, but cuttings are easy to take.
Harvest: It can be picked very lightly in its first year but if possible leave it alone in the first year and pick from the second year. It can be harvested all year round but only lightly in winter as it isn't growing. Once established can be picked all year.

When to Sow Thyme English Winter Herb Seeds

Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec
Sow No Sow No Sow Yes Sow Yes Sow Yes Sow No Sow No Sow Yes Sow Yes Sow No Sow No Sow No
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$0.92

Original: $2.62

-65%
Herb Thyme English Winter Seeds

$2.62

$0.92

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Herb Thyme English Winter Seeds

Thyme English Winter, also known as Common or Garden Thyme, is a hardy evergreen perennial and has small aromatic dark green leaves with clusters of small pale pink flowers. Thyme English Winter (Thymus vulgaris) can be picked all year round and is the classic herb used in 'bouquet garni'.

It is great for stuffings, chicken dishes and stews and is easy to grow from seed and reaches a height & spread of 30cm. The flavour is at it's best from June to July and it does well with freezing & drying or infusing in oil.

Thyme English Winter is a great companion plant and deters cabbage root-fly from cabbages, cauliflowers and brussels sprouts but the flowers also attract many beneficial insects to the garden.

Thyme English Winter Herb Seed Information

Seed Quantity: Approx 500 seeds per pack.
Site:
Sunny, well-drained incorporate grit if tendency to be wet.
When to Sow
March to May or August to September.
How to Sow:
The seed is very fine so mix some with horticultural sand to make it easier to handle. Sprinkle seed thinly on seed trays but cover the seed very very lightly or not at all. Place ideally in a heated propagator or cover with a polythene bag and keep at 20C. The seed should germinate in 2 weeks. Transplant into small pots when large enough. (Thyme can be multi-sown onto a plug tray to avoid the pricking out stage). When thyme plants are about 10cm tall, 'harden off' for 3-4 days & transplant to garden or container when the risk of frost has passed. Plant herbs 30cm apart and add grit to the planting hole if the soil is not light.
Care:
Be careful to keep watering to a minimum as seedlings are prone to 'damping off' and always water from the bottom. Thyme is a woody perennial so after 3 years it will need dividing to encourage fresh vigour and after 5 years it will probably need replacing, but cuttings are easy to take.
Harvest: It can be picked very lightly in its first year but if possible leave it alone in the first year and pick from the second year. It can be harvested all year round but only lightly in winter as it isn't growing. Once established can be picked all year.

When to Sow Thyme English Winter Herb Seeds

Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec
Sow No Sow No Sow Yes Sow Yes Sow Yes Sow No Sow No Sow Yes Sow Yes Sow No Sow No Sow No
SaveSave

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Description

Thyme English Winter, also known as Common or Garden Thyme, is a hardy evergreen perennial and has small aromatic dark green leaves with clusters of small pale pink flowers. Thyme English Winter (Thymus vulgaris) can be picked all year round and is the classic herb used in 'bouquet garni'.

It is great for stuffings, chicken dishes and stews and is easy to grow from seed and reaches a height & spread of 30cm. The flavour is at it's best from June to July and it does well with freezing & drying or infusing in oil.

Thyme English Winter is a great companion plant and deters cabbage root-fly from cabbages, cauliflowers and brussels sprouts but the flowers also attract many beneficial insects to the garden.

Thyme English Winter Herb Seed Information

Seed Quantity: Approx 500 seeds per pack.
Site:
Sunny, well-drained incorporate grit if tendency to be wet.
When to Sow
March to May or August to September.
How to Sow:
The seed is very fine so mix some with horticultural sand to make it easier to handle. Sprinkle seed thinly on seed trays but cover the seed very very lightly or not at all. Place ideally in a heated propagator or cover with a polythene bag and keep at 20C. The seed should germinate in 2 weeks. Transplant into small pots when large enough. (Thyme can be multi-sown onto a plug tray to avoid the pricking out stage). When thyme plants are about 10cm tall, 'harden off' for 3-4 days & transplant to garden or container when the risk of frost has passed. Plant herbs 30cm apart and add grit to the planting hole if the soil is not light.
Care:
Be careful to keep watering to a minimum as seedlings are prone to 'damping off' and always water from the bottom. Thyme is a woody perennial so after 3 years it will need dividing to encourage fresh vigour and after 5 years it will probably need replacing, but cuttings are easy to take.
Harvest: It can be picked very lightly in its first year but if possible leave it alone in the first year and pick from the second year. It can be harvested all year round but only lightly in winter as it isn't growing. Once established can be picked all year.

When to Sow Thyme English Winter Herb Seeds

Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec
Sow No Sow No Sow Yes Sow Yes Sow Yes Sow No Sow No Sow Yes Sow Yes Sow No Sow No Sow No
SaveSave