posted 15 years ago
Thyme is readily propagated with cuttings.  Cut or pinch off 2-4" of new growth, strip off the bottom set of leaves, stuff the end in some soil/dirt/potting mix/what have you, keep it moist.  Start several at a time.  Not every cutting will make it, but some will.  I've got a couple dozen in the greenhouse right now that have been completely neglected for a month and are doing just fine.
 
 Thyme will grow in areas where nothing else will, such as the cracks in the driveway, or in between bricks in a walkway.  It makes for a tight border plant, grows up to around 6-8" and can be trimmed heavily only to come back more full than before.
 
 Although it is perennial, in my experience, about 3 years is all it can take in one spot, especially as much as I neglect the things.
 
 -Fresh thyme is AWESOME with pork chops.  
 -it dehydrates well, strip off the leaves with your fingers when dry
 -Toss the dry sticks/branches into the fire when you BBQ
 -dry leaves work well with beef, red meats, stews
 -grind the dry leaves into a powder, add to cajun seasoning
 
Seed the Mind, Harvest Ideas.
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