Gardening – 2026 – The Year Of The Herbs

By Cynthia Sax on January 28, 2026

One area of the garden I plan to really focus on in 2026 is

herbs.

Specifically herbs that overwinter well. I plan to split the 3 containers of oregano (assuming they survive the winter) into 6. I plan to plant more containers of mint, thyme, sage, try rosemary, experiment with other herbs. I’m super interested in growing chocolate mint. I merely have to figure out a way to source those seeds.

Herbs, fresh OR dried, are very expensive in my part of the world right now. And worse than that, they are often hard to find.

And they add such flavor to food. Plus many herbs ward off the bad bugs in our gardens.

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2025 Gardening Lessons – Plant More Perennial Herbs

By Cynthia Sax on October 15, 2025

2025 was a challenging gardening year for me.

BUT I did learn a lot and that will make it an invaluable year in the future.

One of the things I learned was…

I need more herbs, preferably perennial herbs like mint, sage, thyme and oregano, herbs that overwinter in Toronto and that I don’t have to buy and plant every year.

These herbs not only add some much needed flavor to dishes. But they also ward off unhelpful insects i.e. pests like flea beetles and Japanese beetles while supporting helpful insects like bees and butterflies.

That protects the rest of the garden.

I badly needed that protection in 2025’s growing season. The insects chumped quite a few of the vegetable plants, stripping them to their stems.

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Overwintering Perennial Herbs In A Cold Climate

By Cynthia Sax on October 8, 2025

Last year, I watched a video about how to overwinter perennial herbs in a cold climate like mine (Toronto).

I took the container of oregano, buried it to its rim in the ground close to the house, and covered it with an evergreen branch.

We had a cold, snowy winter (for Toronto). The container of oregano had over four feet of snow on top of it at one point.

But that gardening expert was right!

The oregano regrew in the Spring. I dug the container out and moved it back to its spot in the backyard garden. And it provided us with oregano all summer.

This year, I’m using the same technique with the sage and the mint, as well as the oregano again.

If this works…again, we will have these herbs forever.

This makes me so very happy.

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