Fennel
Foeniculum vulgare
Herb fennel is a stately perennial reaching up to 1.5 metres, with clouds of feathery, anise-scented foliage and flat-topped yellow flowers that are irresistible to hoverflies and ladybirds. Every part is useful: the fronds flavour fish and salads, the seeds are used in baking and curries, and the pollen is considered a delicacy in Italian cooking. Don't confuse herb fennel with Florence fennel (the bulbing type for eating as a vegetable) — they're related but grown differently. Herb fennel is tough, self-seeds freely, and needs minimal care beyond cutting back the old growth in spring. Bronze fennel ('Purpureum') is a particularly handsome variety with dark copper-coloured foliage. One important note: fennel has an allelopathic effect on some plants, inhibiting the growth of beans and tomatoes, so keep it at the edges of your growing area rather than among the vegetable beds.
Plan where to grow Fennel using our vegetable garden planner.
When to Sow Fennel
Sow fennel in March, April, May, June.
Time to Harvest Fennel
Expect to harvest approximately 3 months after sowing.
Expected Yield
Perennial — harvest fronds all season; collect seeds when they turn brown in autumn.
Growing Tips
Keep away from beans and tomatoes
Common Problems with Fennel
Self-seeding everywhere
Cut back flower heads before seeds ripen if spread is unwanted.
Aphids on flower heads
Tolerate or spray — fennel flowers attract beneficial hoverflies that eat aphids.
Inhibiting nearby plants
Fennel has an allelopathic effect on beans and tomatoes. Plant at the edges of your growing area.
Plan your fennel in the allotment planner
Drag and drop plants onto your plot and get personalised sowing reminders.
Open PlannerMore Herbs
Sweet Basil
Ocimum basilicum
Sweet basil is the essential companion to tomatoes — both in the garden and in the kitchen. In UK conditions, it's best treated as a tender annual, started indoors from April and planted out only after all frost risk has passed in late May or June. It performs brilliantly on a sunny windowsill or in a greenhouse, but struggles outdoors in cool, wet summers. Pinch out growing tips regularly to encourage bushy growth and prevent it from flowering too quickly. Once basil flowers, the leaves lose their intensity. Harvest by cutting whole stems rather than picking individual leaves — this promotes fresh growth. 'Genovese' is the classic large-leaf Italian variety; 'Greek' basil forms a compact ball of tiny leaves that's more tolerant of cooler weather.
English Lavender
Lavandula angustifolia
English lavender is one of the most reliable and rewarding perennials for UK gardens. Its silvery foliage and purple flower spikes are irresistible to bees and butterflies, making it a pollinator magnet from June to August. It thrives in poor, well-drained soil — in fact, rich soil and heavy clay are its enemies, causing leggy growth and winter die-off. Plant it in the sunniest, most well-drained spot you have. The key to keeping lavender compact and productive is annual pruning: cut back hard after flowering, removing spent flower stems and about a third of the leafy growth, but never cut into bare wood. 'Hidcote' and 'Munstead' are the most popular UK varieties. Lavender hedging along allotment paths is both beautiful and functional — the scent helps deter deer and rabbits.
Mint
Mentha
Mint is one of the most vigorous herbs you can grow — which is both its greatest strength and its biggest challenge. Left unchecked in open ground, it will colonise entire beds via underground runners. The solution is simple: always grow mint in containers, or sink a large pot into the soil to contain its roots. Beyond this one caveat, mint is virtually indestructible. It thrives in partial shade and damp conditions that would stress most herbs. Harvest regularly by cutting whole stems, which encourages fresh bushy growth. There are dozens of varieties worth growing: spearmint for new potatoes and peas, peppermint for tea, apple mint for a milder flavour, and chocolate mint for a genuinely chocolatey undertone. Replace plants every 3–4 years when they become woody and less flavourful — simply dig up a section of runner and replant.
Rosemary
Salvia rosmarinus
Rosemary is a Mediterranean evergreen that has adapted brilliantly to UK gardens, shrugging off cold winters as long as it has good drainage. It's one of the most useful culinary herbs — essential for roast lamb, focaccia, roast potatoes, and infused oils. The plants develop into handsome woody shrubs over time, with some varieties reaching over a metre tall. 'Miss Jessopp's Upright' is the best variety for hedging; 'Prostratus' cascades over walls and raised bed edges. Rosemary flowers early in the year, providing vital nectar for bees emerging from hibernation in February and March. It's almost impossible to kill from neglect — overwatering and waterlogged soil are the main killers. Prune annually after flowering to prevent the plant becoming leggy and woody. Take softwood cuttings in summer for new plants — they root easily in gritty compost.