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Since 1918 Bonnie Plants have been a favorite of beginning and experienced gardeners. Bonnie offers a wide variety of disease resistant vegetables, hearty herbs, and beautiful flowers that thrive in containers as well as traditional gardens. Now available in our exclusive 4- and 5-inch peat pots, growing your own vegetables and herbs has never been easier. Enjoy healthy food, economy, and tread lightly on the environment!

How to Grow Bonnie's Herbs and Vegetables

Learn how to grow any vegetable or herb. Illustrated instructions walk you through planting, care, harvest,  storage, and troubleshooting.




Featured Articles

How to Create a Compost Pile

Compost Bin and watering can

Any plant material is prime for composting. Whether you choose a compost bin, compost pile, or other composting method, composting is a great way to recycle kitchen and garden waste. Plus, nutrient-rich compost is great for your garden.

Harvest Guide for Cool Weather Veggies

Collander of snap beans, lettuce and broccoli

Know when to pick your broccoli, cabbage, or other fall-garden vegetables using this guide to cool-season vegetables. Picking these plants at their peak will yield lush, tasty vegetables this season.

Fall Gardens Make Sense

Fall gardens make sense

Plant a fall garden with these cool-weather crops, and you'll enjoy fewer insects, less sweat, and great-tasting vegetables. Fall is the perfect time of year to grow broccoli, kale, spinach, and other hearty plants.



How to Grow Lettuce

Lettuce growing in the garden.

If you only grow one vegetable other than tomatoes, make it lettuce. Growing lettuce is easy and doesn't take much space, plus, you can even grow lettuce among flowers.

How to Grow Cilantro

Close up of cilantro

Grow cilantro plants in an herb bed or the corner of a vegetable garden where they have their own space to reseed. Cilantro plants produce flavorful leaves and coriander seeds.

How to Grow Broccoli

Broccoli head.

You can grow broccoli crops twice per year in most parts of the country. Broccoli is a hardy vegetable, so growing broccoli is made easier by the crop's tolerance to temperature changes.