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The Rural Voice, 1999-02, Page 35Gardening Time to consider thyme for your garden By Rhea Hamilton -Seeger While pouring over seed catalogues this past month I thought back on the successes and failures of the last growing season. One of the wonderful successes was the wooly thyme I planted along the walkway and a variegated lemon thyme along the pond edge. Both flourished and offered texture and aroma during the season. They never seemed to show the ill effects of drought conditions and were always a treat to pet and to show new gardeners the joy of scented plants in the garden. I am so taken with them that I am ordering a few more varieties to play with. Thyme is a native of the Mediterranean regions and has been a part of the culinary history of that area for centuries. Thyme was a symbol of courage for the Greeks and they believed it had invigorating properties. In the middle ages a piece of thyme was given to the knights by their ladies to keep up their spirits, and a design depicting a sprig of thyme was commonly embroidered on the scarf offered as a farewell gift to lord or lover before his departure on a Crusade or other high enterprise. Closer to our time, thyme has been used to flavour meats, stews and pasta dishes. It is used with tomato and garlic to flavour any number of foods and is used with parsley and bay leaves in bouquet garni to flavour stocks and broths. Garden thyme (Thymus vulgaris) is the cultivated form of wild thyme (Thymus serphyllum). Known as mother of thyme, probably because of its traditional use for menstrual disorders or for the more obvious reason as the basis of other varieties, wild thyme derives its Latin name from the plant's serpent -like growth. The wild thyme is a low growing evergreen shrub with small highly aromatic leaves and pale purple flowers that are attractive to bees. They rarely grow over eight inches and love full sun and well -drained soil touched with a bit of lime. From these beginnings come over 400 varieties of thyme. There are three basic varieties to start with: English thyme or winter thyme has broad dark green leaves while the French or summer thyme has narrow leaves, distinctly greyer in colour and sweeter than the English; and then there is lemon thyme (T. citriodorus) which has a mild flavour with a distinctly lemon fragrance. From these come further varieties that boast fragrances of caraway, coconut, lavender, nutmeg and 'orange. The leaves remain small but in varying degrees of greens to greys and some are golden or variegated. All rather exciting. Their compact bushy and carpet - like growth makes them ideal for rock gardens, edging perennial beds and along walkways. Richters Herbs of Goodwood has developed a lemon carpet thyme that is the lowest yet, and its wiry stems tolerate trampling better than others. Imagine it tucked between your paving stones. But there is an even more creative use. If you are craving a knot garden or a small formal garden with a clipped look consider the lowly thyme. You can lay out a pattern in the garden and select different varieties of thyme to hest show off the design. The taller, upright hush lemon thyme would be in the centre surrounded by a pattern of variegated and non -variegated thyme with the carpet varieties along the outer edge. Thyme enjoys being trimmed and what you can't eat you can make new plants with in a side bed. After four years some of your plants may become woody and straggling and you may. want to replace some of the plants with your new cuttings. Thyme'grows in the same conditions as lavender and oregano and these may be two other plants to consider working into your knot garden pattern. You can start the seeds indoors in April or right outside after the frost has passed. You can also buy plants and once the plant is big enough you can propagate by using clippings. Take your cuttings in late spring or early summer. You will need three or four inches of shoot. Prepare a small plot in semi -shade. Cover the plot with a bit of sand and insert the cuttings into this. Water them and allow the foliage to dry and then cover them with a cloche or small plastic cover. It is recommended that you keep them covered until spring. I myself am too impatient and with our dreadful gravel would have. to check regularly to make sure they are not drying out. By spring you will have a lovely patch of new plants to move into new spots. One last tip. 'Thyme does not have to be relegated to the flower or herb beds. Thyme is a great companion plant for cabbage since cabbage worms find it so distasteful. Their distaste is our delight.0 Rhea Hamilton -Seeger and her husband raise two children at their home near Auburn. She is a skilled cook and gardener. FEBRUARY 1999 31 ■