Although this seems a very simple question, the answer is quite complex.
I recommend you go to your local library, check out several good books on basic gardening, and at least one specifically on herbs.
Do your research including zone, water needs, sun exposure and hardiness. Prepare your herb bed carefully and then plant away.
Any number of people I know started out growing herbs for their kitchen and have expanded to gardening for their flowers, fruit, and vegetables.
The one bit of advice I can give you is put a 50 cent plant in a 5 dollar hole and you will get good results every time... if you reverse that ratio, you are looking at disappointment more often than not... Happy gardening.
Everyone plants them in different ways and in different places. You can plant them in your house in small pots, you can plant them in your raised bed garden to help other plants, or you can plant them in an herb spiral. There are hundreds of different ways, but herbs are extremely easy to grow. So there's a great way to get started.
WHAT CAN YOU ATTACT A STAGHORN PUP TO
The best way to make a plant grow faster is using the right proportions of Nitrogen, Phosphorus, and Potassium. This is dependent upon the plant species. Also important is the amount of sunlight and dark time that is optimal for the specific plant.
Chose herbs that thrive in the heat, use lots of mulch, in the south east watch for mildew, in the south west use soaker hoses.
no
plant the seeds in your moms vagina, then tell her not to shave for two months and pick the buds out of her pubic hair
By the way it looks
To grow an identical plant, you can propagate it through methods like stem cuttings, division, or layering. Ensure you have a healthy parent plant to take cuttings from, provide the right environmental conditions (light, temperature, water), and use a suitable rooting medium. Monitor the new plant closely as it establishes itself.
It's going to grow toward the window, usually.
Branches grow from the stem,in an odd way.
It was the best way to grow large cash crops.
A tropism in which the roots of plant grow downward, in the direction of gravity