Many summer residents are accustomed to planting dill throughout the entire garden - with tomatoes, cucumbers, onions, and carrots.
Why this should never be done under any circumstances is explained by the expert of the online publication Belnovosti, agronomist, and landscape designer Anastasia Kovrizhnykh .
Why you can't plant dill all over your garden
The fact is that dill releases substances into the soil through its roots that inhibit some crops and slow down their growth.
If you don’t pull out dill from the beds in time, you can lose the harvest.
The proximity of dill is extremely harmful for tomatoes, carrots, celery, parsnips and cilantro.
You can sow dill in beds with cucumbers, onions, potatoes, white cabbage, beets, peas, turnips and lettuce.