Grow the Classic Christmas Scent Right on the Patio!
3-foot plants are great for containers or the garden.
Genus: Mentha
Species: x piperita
Item Form: (P) Pkt of 100 seeds
Zone: 4 – 9
Bloom Start to End: Mid Summer
Days to Maturity: 73
Fruit Color: Green
Habit: Spreading
Seeds Per Pack: 100
Plant Height: 3 ft
Additional Characteristics: Bloom First Year, Cut-and-Come-Again, Easy Care Plants, Pest Fighter, Pruning Recommended, Edible, Flower, Fragrance, Herbs, Indoor Growing
Bloom Color: Purple
Foliage Color: Dark Green, Purple
Harvest Season: Early Fall, Early Summer, Late Fall, Late Spring, Late Summer, Mid Fall, Mid Summer
Light Requirements: Full Sun, Part Shade
Moisture Requirements: Moist, well-drained
Resistance: Deer Resistance, Disease Resistant, Heat Tolerant, Pest Resistant
Soil Tolerance: Normal, loamy
Uses: Border, Containers, Foliage Interest, Ground Cover, Cuisine, Outdoor
73 days from sowing.
No herb or kitchen garden is complete without mint, and peppermint adds a festive note to the display, evoking the holidays and filling the air with its fresh, clean scent when rubbed. Give it a go from seed this season and delight your friends with little peppermint seedlings for the holidays!
Strongly aromatic peppermint can be used in both cooking – in drinks, salads, and baked goods – and in potpourri and other fragrant decorative items. In hot tea, it is said to help stomach upset.
Peppermint is a perennial, reaching 3 feet tall in the garden (much smaller in pots and indoors), and spreading just as far as you will let it. It offers smooth, lance-shaped 3-inch leaves, bright green with purple tints around the edges. In summer, spikes of lilac-pink flowers top the foliage, attracting bees into the garden. Give it sunshine and good soil drainage; it will do the rest!
Like all the mints, peppermint can be invasive. If you want to cover hot, sunny soil, it’s invaluable, but if your space is limited or you want to plant other things nearby, you are much better off confining peppermint to a container. It grows wonderfully, and you will not only have plenty to harvest, but enough to give friends cuttings so that they can start their own mint gardens!
Mint is not the easiest seed to sprout, but if you have a <"prodlink"06529">Bio Dome, it’s a walk in the park: drop one seed in each bio sponge, put the dome on, and wait to see green shoots in 7 to 14 days. If you’re using seed flats or another method of germination, here’s the best approach: set one or two seeds in shallow 1/4-inch holes in moist seed-starting mix. Cover the flat with plastic wrap and germinate at 65 degrees F or above.
If you are starting the seeds in late winter for transplanting in spring, begin about 6 weeks before last scheduled frost. Peppermint will be ready to pick on an as-needed basis about 3 weeks after transplanting; it grows so quickly that you never have to worry about taking too much, as long as you leave a few green leafy stems on the plant! Harvest all summer and fall. Zones 4-9. Pkt is 100 seeds.
Reviews
There are no reviews yet.