It’s that time of year when I’m dying to get my hands dirty. I’ve been collecting seeds all winter and have started prepping my garden space by turning the soil, cleaning up the debris that protected it over the colder months, and thinking about where I’ll put my plants. I’m dizzy with the promise of a summer in my magical garden space where my biggest concern is harvesting and drying my medicinal herbs fast enough—the hard years of pandemic teaching forgotten under the sun’s nurturing gaze and the pliant soil beneath my feet.
This is a feeling that is always with me, even in the winter, warming my soul when it’s too cold to be outside. You see, I grew up in a magical garden. My mother was the original kitchen witch who grew so many herbs and plants in our backyard that stepping out there was like entering this secret garden of enchanted things—it still is!
I remember when I learned that the licorice and lavender and lemon verbena she planted had medicinal properties and that you could steep them to make delicious and healing tisanes. I was obsessed with collecting these plants, brewing with them, and drying them to store in cool jars I’d collected over the years. Yeah…I think it’s pretty clear that I was always kind of witchy!
Even when I left home, I made it a point to bring a little bit of that garden magic with me wherever I went. Sometimes it was just a few plants on a windowsill in my grad school apartment. Other times, it was a magnificent patio garden, complete with vermicompost, where I grew all sorts of culinary and medicinal herbs. Or it was an open space where I could sneak away to plant early spring leeks and onions or the Pinterest board where I pinned everything I wanted in my dream garden, the place I’d cultivate when I lived in my forever home (yes, it will closely resemble the house in the movie, Practical Magic, naturally).
Plant magic is so much a part of my being, especially as a bruja, that I’ve come to think of my garden as an enchanting space for conjuring. I have a natural affinity for plants and have often sought solace in their company when the outer world gets to be too much (truly, plants and cats are much more sensible than humans, at least that’s what my familiar says, and I tend to agree with him).
Sometimes, though, it might seem like a daunting task to create a witchy garden full of medicinal herbs and magical plants. Where do you start? How do you maintain it? What plants do you use? The most important thing to creating a magical garden is your intention—that desire for a more magical life—and taking enjoyment in learning as you go.
So, if, like me, you’re looking to be witchier than ever this year, here are a few tips, in no particular order, to cultivating a witchy garden. It goes without saying, however, that any witchy tips you get here are general guidelines—see what resonates with you and then make your own magic as you develop your relationship to the space you’re working with and the plants that speak to you.
Don’t get too manictured! I quietly cringe at the perfectly manicured gardens in magazines. I can practically hear the plants screaming to be free! A garden should be a sanctuary where you let your hair down, walk barefoot, and forget about the world for a bit. Where you plants can thrive and grow wontonly. Sure, tend your garden, but don’t turn it into the environmental equivalent of those airbrushed models on a magazine cover—they’re not real and should not be images of beauty we aspire to. Instead, embrace the wild messiness of growing things. It’s good for the soul.
Remember that all plants are magic. Who didn’t spend afternoons as a child gathering roots and twigs and leaves and stirring them up to make potions and mudpies? It’s as if we all instinctively knew there was something magical to these living breathing things. (If you are one of those rare and strange creatures who never did that…I feel sorry for you. But that doesn’t mean you can’t enjoy that kind of fun now—go get your hands dirty and collect plants that call to you!). As you go about cultivating your garden, learn about the flowers, herbs, and produce your plant. They all have lovely magical, medicinal, and, yes, even mundane histories. Each of them has stories and there’s something powerful to learn more about them. You’ll be surprised how much of their stories
Talk to your plants…and don’t be surprised if they talk back. Oftentimes, the plants we are most attracted to have the medicine we need. For example, one year, I was deeply drawn to Juniper, the seeds, the leaves, and the sharp smell of its essential oils. I later learned that Juniper is a deeply healing plant that is specifically known for taking negative energy and turning it into light. As it happens, that was the exact magic I needed as I was healing from some toxic situations and learning to find my own happiness again. And, yeah, you should check on your plants and talk with them as you tend them. My mornings aren’t complete without a cup of coffee in the garden and a good chat with growing things before I draw the tarot.
Leave those weeds for the birds and the bees. Okay, I know that we don’t want a garden that’s overgrown with weeds but some are seriously important! This goes back to not being too manicured. The garden is a living ecosystem so leave those dandelions to help our pollinators, just as wildflowers attract birds who help keep pests in line. Some plants that are so aggressive they become like weeds (I’m talking to you, mint!), so do what you have to do to make sure you keep your unwanted plants in check but allow your garden to be a joyful wild ecosystem that isn’t hemmed in by hospital-like tidiness. The wildlife and your mind will thank you!
Embrace composting. There is nothing more magical than taking scraps and other discards and turning them into pure gold. It’s positively alchemical! Composting is a fairly easy thing to learn how to do and one of the cheapest and most eco-friendly ways to nourish your plants--seriously, ditch the chemical fertilizers and other junk that’s bad for the environment. I also like to think of all the energetic junk I’m composting for future fertile soil as I feed my vermicompost or turn the heap. It makes me feel like no experience, piece of writing, or feeling is wasted. Even if it’s something I have to let go of, it has done its part to help nourish my inner garden. It’s very cathartic!
Know your local ecosystem. I love my local medicinal plants like globemallow and yerba mansa, not to mention the drought-hardy Hollyhocks. Part of cultivating a witchy garden is knowing the land around you and the plants and animals that thrive there. When you garden in harmony with the environment around you, you produce better yields, have happier plants and wildlife, and embrace your inner wildflower.
I suppose if there’s one last bit of advice to give you as you cultivate your witchy garden, it’s to listen to your intuition. Plant the plants that make you happy. Design your space in a way that soothes the soul. Go slow. Enjoy the sacred simple pleasure of time spent with growing things. And always, always make a little time each day to get your hands dirty.
Enchantment Learning & Living is an inspirational blog celebrating life’s simple pleasures, everyday mysticism, and delectable recipes that are guaranteed to stir the kitchen witch in you. If you enjoyed what you just read and believe that true magic is in the everyday, subscribe to my newsletter below for regular doses of enchantment. Want even more inspiration? Follow me on Instagram, Facebook, Pinterest, and Twitter. Here’s to a magical life!