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CHUXAY GARDEN 20 Seeds Horehound Seed Marrubium Vulgare,White Horehound Mint Herb Plant Fragrant Edible Bitter Perennial Herb Seeds for Planting
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CHUXAY GARDEN 20 Seeds Horehound Seed Marrubium Vulgare,White Horehound Mint Herb Plant Fragrant Edible Bitter Perennial Herb Seeds for Planting

Hardiness zone.4-10 Grow.Plant the seed three weeks before your last expected frost date. The seeds are surface sown and covered with a dusting of soil to prevent the wind from taking them. When to plant.The best time to plant horehound is in the fall. Feature.Its blunt-toothed broad wrinkled leaves are woolly white below and pale green and downy …
Hardiness zone.4-10 Grow.Plant the seed three weeks before your last expected frost date. The seeds are surface sown and covered with a dusting of soil to prevent the wind from taking them. When to plant.The best time to plant horehound is in the fall. Feature.Its blunt-toothed broad wrinkled leaves are woolly white below and pale green and downy above. Use.The leaves and flowering tops are used as flavouring for beverages and candies, and infusions or extracts of horehound in the form of syrups, teas. Horehound, (Marrubium vulgare), also spelled hoarhound, also called white horehound, bitter perennial herb of the mint family (Lamiaceae), native to Europe, North Africa, and Central Asia. The plant has naturalized throughout much of North and South America and is considered an invasive species in parts of Australia and New Zealand. The leaves and flowering tops are used as flavouring for beverages and candies, and infusions or extracts of horehound in the form of syrups, teas, or lozenges are sometimes used in herbal remedies for coughs and minor pulmonary disturbances. The horehound plant is coarse, strongly aromatic, and less than 1 metre (3 feet) tall with square stems. Its blunt-toothed broad wrinkled leaves are woolly white below and pale green and downy above. The flowers are small, whitish, and densely clustered in axillary whorls. The plant is drought-tolerant and can thrive in poor soils. Horehound is grown in full sun and well drained soil. The plants other requirements are minimal as it can spring up naturally in nutrient deficient areas and sandy soils. Horehound produces a burr-like seed pod which contains tiny seeds. The seeds are slow to germinate and do not need to be sown deeply. Prior to seeding the horehound plant cultivate the soil and rake it to remove roots, rocks and debris.
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Hardiness zone.4-10 Grow.Plant the seed three weeks before your last expected frost date. The seeds are surface sown and covered with a dusting of soil to prevent the wind from taking them. When to plant.The best time to plant horehound is in the fall. Feature.Its blunt-toothed broad wrinkled leaves are woolly white below and pale green and downy above. Use.The leaves and flowering tops are used as flavouring for beverages and candies, and infusions or extracts of horehound in the form of syrups, teas. Horehound, (Marrubium vulgare), also spelled hoarhound, also called white horehound, bitter perennial herb of the mint family (Lamiaceae), native to Europe, North Africa, and Central Asia. The plant has naturalized throughout much of North and South America and is considered an invasive species in parts of Australia and New Zealand. The leaves and flowering tops are used as flavouring for beverages and candies, and infusions or extracts of horehound in the form of syrups, teas, or lozenges are sometimes used in herbal remedies for coughs and minor pulmonary disturbances. The horehound plant is coarse, strongly aromatic, and less than 1 metre (3 feet) tall with square stems. Its blunt-toothed broad wrinkled leaves are woolly white below and pale green and downy above. The flowers are small, whitish, and densely clustered in axillary whorls. The plant is drought-tolerant and can thrive in poor soils. Horehound is grown in full sun and well drained soil. The plants other requirements are minimal as it can spring up naturally in nutrient deficient areas and sandy soils. Horehound produces a burr-like seed pod which contains tiny seeds. The seeds are slow to germinate and do not need to be sown deeply. Prior to seeding the horehound plant cultivate the soil and rake it to remove roots, rocks and debris.