
Here at Winterpast, the garden always seems to know what I need before I do.
As gardeners throughout the ages have discovered, many plants in our gardens are not only beautiful, but medicinal, as well. Long before pharmacies and plastic bottles filled our cabinets, people grew their medicine just outside the back door.
Yesterday, while walking through the newly re-arranged aisles of our Walmart, I discovered a new seed collection called Medicinal Gardens, filled with heirloom varieties that have been used for centuries. It sounded exotic at first, but looking closer, I found that many of these plants are herbs we already use in the kitchen.

Chamomile, with its tiny daisy-like flowers, has been used for generations to calm the nerves and help with sleep. Lemon balm brightens the garden with soft green leaves and offers a gentle lift to the spirit when brewed as tea. Peppermint wakes up both the palate and the mind. Lavender soothes. Calendula helps the skin. Echinacea strengthens the immune system. These aren’t strange laboratory plants, but ordinary garden companions.
What makes heirloom medicinal seeds especially fascinating is that they connect us to gardeners from hundreds of years ago. Preserved because they worked, families saved the seeds and grew them again the following year. Over time, they became trusted allies in the household garden.
Planting them yesterday felt like joining a very old conversation between humans and the natural world. 2026 was to be a light year for seedlings, but yesterday, that plan went out the window. As the sunflowers have nearly aged out and are now ready for replanting, the new crop of seeds can begin. Whether we attract a swarm of bees with our experiment or not, the neighborhood bees will be delighted.

Purple echinacea swaying beside golden calendula. Lavender lining a walkway. Chamomile scattered like tiny stars between vegetables. Sage and thyme forming tidy little hedges of silvery green. A corner of mint perfuming the air when the sun warms the leaves. The bees, butterflies, and other pollinators will love this!
As gardeners, we benefit in ways that go far beyond the physical. A medicinal garden invites us to slow down and take notice. To harvest a few leaves for an afternoon cup of tea. To remember that healing does not always come from complicated places. Sometimes it grows quietly in the soil while we are busy doing other things.

At Winterpast, the dining room table is currently overflowing with seedlings that will soon find their homes in the garden beds outside. Zinnias, daisies, sunflowers, and strawflowers are preparing for their spring debut. Among them will be herbs and healing plants tucked into the beds wherever there is space. Beauty and health growing side by side.
A medicinal garden isn’t about replacing doctors or prescriptions. It’s about partnership with the natural world, while remembering that plants offer comfort, nourishment, fragrance, and quiet restoration. Growth is always happening, even when we can’t quite see it yet. A tiny seed goes into the soil looking like nothing at all. A few weeks later, a small green shoot appears. And before long, life is everywhere. The garden has its own way of doing that.











































