Zone 8 · Herbs Growing Guide

When to Plant Thyme
in Zone 8

Drought-tolerant perennial that thrives on neglect. Perfect border plant. Harvest before flowering for strongest flavour. Woody perennial — prune to prevent legginess.

Plant window opens
Feb 01
Last chance to plant
Mar 15
Last frost
~Feb 15
Days to harvest
60–90 days
Difficulty
Easy
Ready to harvest — Zone 8
Harvest: Year-round

Planting Calendar

In Zone 8, Thyme can be planted outdoors from Feb 01 — the window closes around Mar 15.

Year-round perennial in Zone 8. May struggle in high-humidity summers.

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What Zone 8 growers say about Thyme
plant team · Zone 8
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Care Guide

Sunlight
Full sun · 6–8 hrs/day
Watering
Low
Spacing
12–18 inches
Soil
Sandy, well-draining, low fertility
Days to maturity
60–90 days
Soil pH
6.0–8.0
Plant tip · Zone 8
Year-round perennial in Zone 8. May struggle in high-humidity summers.
Lifecycle
Productive life: 5+ yrsPerennial
How to know it's ready
Pick before flowering. Morning harvest when oils are highest.

Watering Thyme

How often
Every 7–10 days — drought tolerant
How much
0.5–1 inch per week
Method
At soil level
Overwatering signs
Root rot, yellowing — very common mistake
Underwatering signs
Dry woody stems (often fine)

Feeding Schedule

How often
once a season
Feed type
Low-nutrition fertilizer or none
Key timing
early spring
NPK: low N — over-feeding reduces flavour intensity

Light feeder — excess feeding reduces aromatic oils. One light feed in spring when growth begins is all that's needed.

Example product: Espoma Herb-Tone (half strength)

Seasonal Care

Feb
Prune
Cut back by one-third in spring as new growth emerges. Never cut into woody stems. Replace plants every 4–5 years as productivity declines.
DirectHarden off required
Direct sow after last frost or start indoors 6–8 weeks before. Harden off transplants. Or buy plants — thyme from seed is slow.
Container friendly · Minimum 1 gallons
Excellent container herb. Good drainage is essential. Terracotta pots ideal.

Companion Planting for Thyme

What you plant near thyme makes a real difference — here's what to plant, when, and why.

Pest deterrent
Brassicas
Repels cabbage worm and whitefly
Plant at same time
Strawberries
Repels slugs and worms
Plant at same time
Keep away from
Basil — Compete and inhibit each other

Pests & Diseases

Know what to look for before it gets out of hand — early identification is the most important step.

What to look for
Clusters of tiny soft insects on new growth and leaf undersides. Leaves curl, yellow, or become sticky with honeydew. Sooty black mold may follow.
Cause
Multiple aphid species. Populations explode rapidly in warm weather.
Organic treatment
Blast off with strong water jet. Apply insecticidal soap or neem oil directly to colonies. Introduce ladybugs or lacewings.
Prevention
Plant marigolds and nasturtiums nearby. Avoid excess nitrogen fertilizer which creates soft, aphid-attractive growth. Encourage beneficial insects.
What to look for
Metallic striped beetles eating leaves and flowers. Most active autumn and spring.
Cause
Chrysolina americana. Affects lavender, rosemary, sage, thyme, marjoram.
Organic treatment
Hand-pick adults and larvae. Shake over a sheet. Pyrethrum spray.
Prevention
Check plants regularly. Avoid hiding spots at base.
What to look for
White coating on leaves. Leaves yellow and drop. Common on sage and mint.
Cause
Various Erysiphe fungi.
Organic treatment
Remove affected leaves. Improve airflow. Neem oil spray.
Prevention
Water at soil level. Ensure good spacing.

Recommended Varieties

  • English/Common Thyme (classic)
  • French Thyme (more refined flavour)
  • Lemon Thyme (citrus notes)
  • Creeping Thyme (ground cover)
English Thyme is the most cold-hardy and reliable. French Thyme is more flavourful but slightly less hardy.
Crop Rotation — rotate every 0 years
Perennial — no annual rotation
Avoid planting after: N/A — permanent planting
Good to follow: N/A — permanent planting
Fruit trees and perennial shrubs are permanent plantings — crop rotation does not apply. Choose the planting site carefully as it is permanent.

Storing Your Harvest

Room temp
1 week at room temperature in a glass of water
Fridge
1–2 weeks
Freezer
Strip leaves and freeze dry — maintains excellent flavour
Thyme dries exceptionally well — arguably better dried than fresh for most cooking.

Free app · Kickstarter October 2027 · iOS February 2028

Know exactly when to plant, prune, and harvest Thyme

plant uses your ZIP code and real frost data to tell you the right day — not just the right month. Get notified when your planting window opens, when to succession sow, and when to cut back for next season.

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Common questions

In Zone 8, direct sow thyme outdoors Feb 1 – Mar 15 after your last frost of approximately Feb 15. Year-round perennial in Zone 8. May struggle in high-humidity summers.
Zone 8 has an average last spring frost around Feb 15 and a first fall frost around Dec 1. These vary by location — the plant app uses your ZIP code with NOAA data for precision.
Good companions for thyme include Brassicas, Strawberries. Avoid planting near Basil.
Thyme typically takes 60–90 days to harvest in Zone 8. Expected harvest window: Year-round.

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