Hordeum vulgare — barley
Hordeum vulgare is the botanical name for barley, one of the world's oldest cultivated cereals and a versatile grain grown today for food, forage and soil care. In the garden and on the smallholding it sits within our grass and cereal range, and earns a place among our green manures when sown to protect and feed the soil.
History & origin
Barley was among the very first crops domesticated in the Fertile Crescent, feeding early civilisations as bread, porridge and brewing grain for thousands of years. The genus name Hordeum is the classical Latin word for barley, while the species name vulgare simply means “common” — a fitting label for a grain that became a staple across the ancient world.
Botanical characteristics
An annual cereal grass, barley forms upright tufts of broad, blue-green leaves and produces distinctive flowering spikes fringed with long, bristly awns. Fast and hardy, it grows well in cooler conditions and poorer soils, which makes it as useful for quick green cover and forage as it is for grain — qualities that place it alongside our cover crops.
Growing Hordeum vulgare from seed
Barley is straightforward and quick from seed. Sow into a firm, weed-free seedbed and cover lightly; it germinates readily and establishes fast, smothering weeds and holding the soil. Whether grown for grain, cut for forage or turned in as a green manure, a little ground preparation pays off — see our soil preparation guide.
Ready to grow barley? Explore our grass and cereal seed or learn the basics first.
Related categories: Grass · Green Manures · Cover Crops · Soil Builders
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