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Bee Balm, A Beautiful and Useful Plant for your Garden
By Monica Resinger
http://homemakersjournal.com

Description and Growing Information

Bee Balm is a very pretty herb with a wonderful fruity, minty aroma. The 
gorgeous tubular flowers, held like a crown at the top of the 3-4 foot stems in 
mid and late summer come in a lot of colors including red, pink and purple. On 
top of all these qualities, it is a hardy perennial herb that will grow in all 
zones. Bee Balm requires full sun or light shade and fertile, light and moist 
soil. It is best propagated by division or cuttings rather than seed because 
the seed isn’t always true to the parent plant. 

In the Garden

Bee Balm is so pretty it should be included in your flower beds. It will 
attract bees, butterflies and hummingbirds to your garden. I know it’s hard to 
welcome bees into the garden, but remember that we need them to pollinate our 
plants. Good partners for Bee Balm are Purple Coneflower (Echinacea purpurea), 
Black Eyed Susan (Rudbeckia), and Lavender (Lavandula). 

Uses

Tea. This is a wonderful tea herb. To make a cup of tea, simply place tabl
espoon of fresh or one teaspoon of dried Bee Balm leaves and/or flowers in a 
tea strainer or tea spoon and pour one cup of boiling water over it. Allow it 
to steep for ten minutes and bring the tea out. Sweeten if you wish and enjoy. 

Cut Flowers. The flowers make excellent cut flowers. Be sure to cut the stems 
at an angle so they can take up water.

Culinary. Chop the leaves and flowers and add to fruit salads for extra flavor. 
Garnish any type of salad with the leaves and flowers. 

Preserving

The leaves and flowers of Bee Balm can be dried and used for potpourri or tea. 
To dry, bundle 8-10 stems with a rubber band at the cut end and hang upside 
down until crisp to the touch. Crush and store in airtight containers out of 
direct sunlight. 

Monica is the founder Homemaker's Journal E-publications, the growing home of 
many fun and informative home and garden e-books, tip sheets, articles and 
more!  http://homemakersjournal.com/
Get a FREE Slowcooker Recipe E-book when you subscribe to Monica's FREE e-zine 
for homemakers!  To subscribe and receive instructions for picking up your FREE 
e-book, just send a blank e-mail to:  [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Feel free to publish this article as long as the above bylines & this note are 
included; notification at [EMAIL PROTECTED] would be appreciated.



[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]


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