Camellia sinensis, the tea camellia, is the common source of tea leaves. But this attractive species of camellia doesn't look anything like the flakes we tip into the teapot. The leaf tips are harvested regularly throughout the growing season and the different types of tea (green, black) are the result
Grow your own cuppa
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Coffee beans.
Other widely-grown plants are infused to make herbal teas. Yates seed range includes Borage, Peppermint and Oregano, which are all popular herbal infusions. Growing from seed is a cost-effective way of developing a herbal tea garden.
Coffee (Coffea arabica) is much more of a warmth lover than the tea camellia. It won't cope with cold conditions and can only be grown outdoors in a frost-free climate. Fortunately, coffee makes a successful indoor plant. Coffee's glossy leaves have an attractive pleated appearance and the perfumed white flowers appear in masses along the stems. The flowers are followed by the coffee ‘cherries', a name that doubtless comes from the bright, cherry red colour of the ripe fruit.
Coffee is extracted from the seeds that are found within the cherries, but processing the seeds into coffee is a fairly tedious job that's best left to the professionals. It may be better to enjoy your coffee tree for its good looks and regard it simply as a talking point.
In the warmer months, an indoor-grown coffee tree will appreciate some time outside. Move the pot into a shaded outdoor spot, and then gradually expose it to a little more sunshine. Even though you acclimatise it to the sun, it will probably be happiest in a gentle, morning sun position.
Don't forget that your coffee plant will need much more water outdoors than it did when inside. Feed with some Yates Thrive Indoor Liquid Plant Food in spring.