Planting chamomile: location, sowing & Co

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Would you like fresh chamomile tea from your own garden? No problem, because real chamomile is very easy to grow.

flowers of chamomile
The chamomile forms the first flowers at the end of May [Photo: pilialoha/ Shutterstock.com]

The cultivation of native wild herbs such as the real chamomile (Matricaria chamomilla) is worthwhile for a variety of reasons. The beautiful wild herbs can be used in the kitchen and serve as a source of food for the bees. Since chamomile is a rather undemanding plant, you too will soon be able to brew your own chamomile tea without much effort. Here are tips and tricks on how to plant real chamomile in the garden.

contents

  • Plant chamomile: the right location
  • Sowing chamomile
  • Prick out and plant out
  • Good neighbors: what to plant next to chamomile

Plant chamomile: the right location

A location with lots of light is ideal for chamomile, preferably in full sun. But even a little less light hardly affects growth. It is more important to consider the soil conditions. Loamy, silty soils are ideal. The ground should not be too sandy. A pH value of around seven and a high nutrient and humus content is also good for chamomile. If the soil does not have this property, you can help with the incorporation of high-quality soil. For example, our is suitable for this 

Plantura organic universal soil, which has a loose structure and high water storage capacity and contains important nutrients. It is also ideal for planting camomile in pots. However, a drainage layer should be laid on the bottom of the pot and about 15% sand should be mixed in to improve permeability.

Sowing chamomile

Chamomile is usually sown directly outdoors. The first seedlings can already be seen after four to five days under suitable conditions. Since the chamomile seedlings are slightly sensitive to frost, it is best not to sow them before the beginning of May. From the beginning of March, seeds can also be sown indoors in a bright location. Then the young plants can also be planted outdoors from mid-May. Whether indoors or outdoors: When sowing, the seed must not be covered with substrate. This would be a disadvantage with chamomile, since it germinates in the light. Prepare the soil by removing other plants and root debris and loosening the soil slightly with a rake. Then the chamomile seeds are distributed, rolled and well moistened. The chamomile can be sown as a flowering scented lawn or planted individually. If the chamomile plants are to stand alone, a distance of about 20 cm is recommended. At 15 - 20 °C the chamomile seeds germinate after one to two weeks.

chamomile plants
Seedlings sown in fall should be protected from deep frosts [Photo: Isolda Swan/ Shutterstock.com]

Tip: For growing camomile indoors, it is best to use special potting soil, such as ours Plantura Organic Herb & Seed Soil. Because the lower nutrient content helps the plants to develop stronger roots.

Alternatively, the chamomile can also be sown outdoors in autumn. It then germinates before winter and the leaf rosettes have to be brought through the cold season. Although the rosettes are hardy, they should be protected from low temperatures by a layer of foliage mulch.
If the chamomile flowers at its location, chamomile will grow again in the same place through self-sowing. Unless you want to learn about the effectiveness and uses of the Chamomile as a medicinal plant Make use. For these purposes, the flowers must be harvested before seed maturity occurs.

chamomile flower
If the flowers are not harvested, the chamomile will self-seed [Photo: Simon Groewe/ Shutterstock.com]

Can you plant chamomile from tea bags? No, growing chamomile from tea bags will most likely not be worth it. The dried flowers are usually used for chamomile tea because they contain many beneficial ingredients. Since the fruit ripens, and thus the seeds form, only after the flowering period, there are usually no chamomile seeds in the tea bags.

At a glance: sowing chamomile

  • Choose a suitable location
  • Improve soil if necessary
  • Remove root residues and weeds, loosen the soil slightly
  • Distribute seed, do not cover with soil
  • Press and water the seeds lightly
chamomile location
Before sowing the chamomile, other plant debris should be removed from the bed [Photo: Tanongsak Sangthong/ Shutterstock.com]

Prick out and plant out

As a rule, chamomile tolerates direct seeding outdoors best, because transplanting and pricking out mean stress for the plants. However, advance breeding is possible. Once the chamomile has been grown indoors, the plants will eventually be large enough to be transplanted into the garden or into their own pot. Start pricking out when the first leaves appear after the cotyledons. If the chamomile is to be transplanted into a container, it is advisable to create a drainage layer beforehand. From the end of April, the plantlets can then also be placed in the flower bed. A distance of about 15 cm should be maintained between the individual specimens. Now a small hole is dug so that the seedling disappears almost to the base of the leaf in the ground. The hole is filled with substrate, which is then cast on.

Chamomile Prefer
After pre-cultivation, you have to prick out the chamomile [Photo: D.Somsup/ Shutterstock.com]

Good neighbors: what to plant next to chamomile

Chamomile is actually particularly good in the vegetable patch, because it goes well with potatoes (Solanum tuberosum), Leek (Allium porrum), kohlrabi (Brassica oleracea var. gongylodes) and other types of cabbage and nasturtium (Tropaeolum majus). It can help ward off fungi and pests. Aphids, for example, like to infest the nasturtium, which does not suffer from it and thus keeps the little animals away from other plants.

peppermint (mentha x piperita) and chamomile, on the other hand, do not get along very well. This is partly due to their ingredients, which are also released into the soil and the environment. Chamomile does not tolerate the substances in peppermint particularly well and is thus inhibited in its growth. Other plants, in turn, promote each other through this exchange of substances. Such mixed culture has a positive effect on the growth of the plant partners.

Mint in the bed
Even if they harmonize well in tea, chamomile and mint should grow separately in the bed [Photo: Menno van der Haven/ Shutterstock.com]

More information on the topic Harvesting and storing chamomile see this article.