Here's How Catnip Can Help Your Vegetable Garden

by Bill and Aby Brooks, REALTORS® 12/26/2021

Catnip is an herb of many talents. Besides being famously loved by cats, it also has many benefits for your home and garden. Catnip can be particularly beneficial when grown in vegetable gardens because of its pest-repelling properties. Here we’ll go into detail about how and why to use catnip in your vegetable garden.

Bug Repellent

One of catnip’s most useful features is that the oil in its leaves repels a long list of common pests. Growing catnip can keep insects away that would normally bother humans, like mosquitos and flies. It can also keep away pests that pose a threat to your vegetable crops like aphids, weevils, squash bugs and a variety of beetles. It’s even proven effective at keeping away rats, mice and deer and preventing them from causing damage and stealing a free meal.

There are many veggie crops you can grow with catnip. Collared greens are one of the most commonly paired plants with catnip. Collared greens are highly susceptible to damage from flea beetles, which conveniently catnip. Other vegetables like beets, pumpkins, squash and potatoes also do very well with catnip as a companion plant to ward against uninvited insect intruders.

However, an important exception to catnip’s bug-repelling properties is bees and butterflies. The fragrant and hardy flowers that bloom through summer and early autumn are a favorite of honey bees and other pollinators. Planting catnip can provide an excellent source of nectar for bees all throughout the growing season.

Cat Distraction

Cats love catnip, which you can actually use to your advantage in protecting the rest of your garden. One of the key chemical compounds in catnip is called nepetalactone, which creates an excited euphoria in our feline friends. This chemical attracts cats to the plant and is the reason it makes such a great deterrent from your vegetables.

By planting catnip a safe distance from the vulnerable vegetable plants, you can effectively distract your cats from causing trouble in the soil. While organic material is excellent fertilizer, the kind your cat is likely to leave behind is not what your vegetables need to grow strong—not to mention the digging can end up causing damage to root systems and more. If they are distracted by a patch of catnip, however, they will be sufficiently waylaid and do their business elsewhere.

Just make sure you plant the catnip far enough away from your veggies so that any trampling and rolling around doesn’t harm the plants. The catnip itself can take quite a beating once fully mature, but you want to avoid your crops being damaged in all the fun.

Catnip is an extremely useful plant even if you don’t have cats. Many tout the herb’s medicinal properties when steeped into tea. While it might cause excitement in cats, it can have a calming effect on humans, making it a popular choice for promoting relaxation. Its multiple benefits to both humans and the rest of your garden ecosystem make it an excellent choice in companion plant for your vegetables.

About the Author
Author

Bill and Aby Brooks, REALTORS®

Aby’s understanding of excellent customer service stems from her extensive professional background. Prior to earning her real estate license in 2005, along with her college degree that focuses on business and engineering, Aby was the head of purchasing, inventory and quality assurance for an OEM medical and aerospace manufacturing company. Known by her clients and fellow realtors for her tenacity, honesty, integrity, and attention to detail, as a full-time realtor, she is also appreciated for her quick response to her client’s needs. Aby has been an avid horse rider and owner since the age of eight, with her husband Billas a local firefighter/EMT they are very active within the community. Bill served as a US Army Airborne Ranger in 75th Ranger Regiment, he is a combat-wounded veteran who was awarded a Purple Heart. Bill's background as facility Manager for an International metals company and as a firefighter/EMT gives him the experience, attention to detail and the desire to go above and beyond to serve his customers. The Brooks' serve on the board of a local non-profit (501c3) that gives back to the veterans, first responders and their families. The Brooks family resides on their small ranch in Manatee County. Aby& Bill excel in all types of real estate and their passion is helping people. “We genuinely like people, growing up in Sarasota and Manatee counties and now raising our own family here, it is an absolute pleasure to share our growing area with newcomers and reminisce with longtime residents. Our area has so much to offer and it is our business to help folks buy and sell their own piece of paradise.”