articlecavern.com articlecavern.com
Search:    Main Page :> About Us :> Security & Privacy :> Terms of Use :> Add Url :> Add Article   
Get 3 way links
 

Medical Care

Culture & Art

Government & Politics

Internet & Computers

People & Communities

Technology & Science

Games & Play

Business & Services

Children

Eating & Drinking

Relationship & Lifestyle

Outdoor & Sports

Garden & Home

Shopping & Auction

Recreation & Entertainment

Issues & News

Hotels & Travel

Finance & Investment

Fitness & Health

Academics & Education

Jobs & Careers

Self Healing

Vehicles & Automotive

Estate & Realty


 

  Main Page › Garden & Home › Hobby
   
 

Selling Home-Grown Tea Herbs

   

Author: Barbara Adams

There are numerous ways to package dried herbal teas for sale, from tea-themed gift baskets to home spa tea collections. Also, they can be sold as individual live potted plants. These are usually for your customers' gardens, but some tea herbs can be grown on a windowsill or porch, or even on your customers' desks at work.

Live potted plants ready to be placed in the customers gardens can also be sold in themed packages, such as a collection for a summer iced tea postage stamp garden, or as a collection for the customers own gift garden, where they grow tea to harvest and dry for gifts they give to family and friends.

Harvested and dried herbs can be sold bulk as individual plants, or exclusive specialty blends can be created with your home businesss label.

Herbal teas make great products to wrap with other related products into gift baskets, from simple herbal tea samplers to elaborate tea party gift baskets with the inclusion of resale items such as ceramic tea pots and infusers.

Making direct contact with potential customers involves both allowing visitors to your gardens, or selling the herbs off the premises. For visitors, larger tea gardens can become healing sanctuaries themselves, where replicas of Japanese tea gardens or historical European herb gardens can be re-created. In the 18th century, popular coffee houses, which were then considered somewhat rough places where competitive business deals took place, began to give way to high-class tea gardens at the insistence of the ladies. Some of these gardens were almost visions of paradise, with lantern-lit walks, music, dancing, and where exotic landscapes allowed royalty and the common people to intermingle. A well-known tea garden of 1765, Ranelagh Gardens, hosted the nine-year-old Mozart as a performer. No local Mozart to invite? A commercial garden in Washington State hosts a local harpist every Mothers Day.

For selling away from home, you can offer to host tea tastings for a fee. Benefits and other gatherings enjoy such services, especially if their people get to meet the actual farmer.

Also, look for a listing of local tea houses. A teahouse the author inquired into even asked for edible flowers along with tea herbs.

Stay safe, and keep potential customers safe. Check into all local regulations on safe harvest and storage, and know what can and cant be said as far as medicinal claims. These laws change, so make sure your information is recent. For example, St. Johns Wort was reportedly banned in France, while its production continues in other countries. In some cases, you can be allowed to describe health claims if an established research entity has made the claim, and you quote them. The non-profit Herb Research Institute, www.Herbs.org (HRI) may be of help in this area (see below). According to the HRI, scientific credibility is essential to bolster consumer confidence in herbs and for the continued growth of the industry. Since its founding in 1983, HRF has served as the central archive of scientific literature on the health effects and safety of botanicals and has developed the world's most comprehensive collection of clinical trials, pharmacology, toxicology, chemical, historical, and horticultural data on thousands of herbal ingredients. HRF's current collection consists of more than 300,000 articles.

(c) 2006 Barbara Adams

Author Bio:

Barbara Adams

Barbara Adams is the author of Micro Eco-Farming: Prospering from Backyard to Small Acreage in Partnership with the Earth, published by New World Publishing.

She shows readers how to turn backyards, urban lots, and small acreages into fun, profitable, family-friendly earth-restoring livelihoods from spare time to full time.

Her second title will explore the hows and benefits of making your farm or garden home business a destination in the form of agritourism and community workshops and festivals.

She is also the founder of the World Grace Foundation,a "Heaven-on-Earth Project." World Grace is an interfaith/interphilosophy peace, sustainability and spiritual non-profit helping African orphans and all cultures restore sustainability and "Grace" both within themselves and expressed outwardly.

She lives on an island in Washington State, USA with her husband. Here, they are restoring Island Meadow Farm to offer organic and gourmet herbs, fruits, vegetables, flowers and sustainable farming demonstrations. They have four grown children.

You can also reach this article by using: tower hobbies, horizon hobbies, list of hobbies, radio control hobbies, ultimate hobbies
 
 
 

Related Articles

 
Deer-proof Garden
 
Oil Finishes for Wood - Which One?
 
Home Office: Identifying Your Needs
 
Water Purifiers - Answers To Your Questions
 
Window Air Conditionar Rentals
 
Baby Slings - Comfort for Both the Child and the Parent
 
Children and Golf - Making Quality Family Time
 
Bean Bag Chair Filling -- Is It Really Beans?
 
Holidays in the Caribbean
 
Alarm Controls are the Brain of your Security System, Use Yours When Choosing One
 
 
 
 
 

Fabric Hammocks

When one says hammock, one easily can visualize ultimate relaxation, leisure and procrastinating on ... - Richard Romando
 

Dog Breed Profile - Greyhound

Despite what most people think, these dogs can be real couch potatoes! Although they are capable of ... - Stephanie Bayliss
 

Growing Great Strawberries

Probably the most popular small fruit for the home garden, strawberries are also among the hardest t ... - Michael Russell
 
 

How much water does a lawn really need?

Find out how much you really need to water your lawn to keep it healthy and beautiful. - Robin Reckard
 

How to Create a Zen Garden

This article describes the features of a Zen Garden and includes a brief historical introduction. Su ... - Hugh Harris-Evans
 
 
Main Page :> Security & Privacy :> Terms of Use
© 2008 www.articlecavern.com All Rights Reserved.