| Herbs of the Disc |
| Bachelors-in-the-grass |
A rather woody stick of plant. You have no idea how it got its name. It smells rather pleasant. |
| Basil |
A short plant, it is, with light green silky leaves and whorls of small white flowers. |
| Comfrey |
This plant has winged, hairy stems and blue, purplish, or yellow flowers. |
| Eyebright |
It has wiry, branched, erect stems, jagged leaves, and tiny lilac flowers with yellow centers. |
| Fennel |
It has a bright green foliage bearing umbel of yellow flowers. |
| Ironhard Tacky |
This plant consists of a tall, rigid stalk that appears to have a sticky syrup on its leaves. |
| Garlic |
This plant has fleshy green leaves and a pungent odour. |
| Knapweed |
A tall slender plant with purplish thistle-like flowers. |
| Moon-daisies |
A small, low growing plant with a rosette of leaves and flower heads of yellow central disc flowers and pinkish-white night-blooming outer ray flowers. |
| Oregano |
This plant looks very...green. |
| Parsley |
Parsley is a dark green, lacework ball. |
| Pepper Pants |
Odd yellow blossoms that look vaguely like a pair of pantaloons on a windy day are strung along the long, slender stems of this plant. |
| Pink Tickle |
This plant has spiky stems with pink flowers shaped like plumes. The flowers are delightfully soft to the touch. |
| Nuns Legs |
This is a plant with fat, furry leaves in a rather disturbing shade of flesh. |
| Parsley |
Parsley is a dark green, lacework ball. |
| Rosemary |
Rosemary is a foot-high greyish-green plant with small flowers on long cework ball. |
| Rosemary |
Rosemary is a foot-high greyish-green plant with small flowers on long stalks spaced up and down the main stalk. |
| Sage |
This plant is greyish-green. Wizards like to season food with this due to the theory you are what you eat. |
| Sorrel |
A low-growing plant having slightly bitter-tasting leaves and small reddish flowers, used in salads and sauces. |
| Thyme |
Thyme is on your side. |
| Yarrow |
This is a plant with a long stem, branching towards the top into a cluster of small white or pink flowers. |