As for Borage cultivation, it's really an easy plant to get going in a sunny, well-drained area of the garden. Just get a pack of seeds (I've never seen plants for sale, and besides I think it's best direct sown where it is to be grown), plant them according to the instructions (about a 1/2 inch down) either in very early spring or in the fall after frost while the ground is still workable, but unlikely to promote germination. You might have to look a bit for seeds, but I know you can get them from Botanical Interests (where ours came from), and I'm sure Richter's Herbs would have them as well, that great Canadian company has just about anything herbal! They're easy to identify as seedlings because the first true leaves are every bit as hairy as the adult plant, and they don't look anything like the usual garden weeds. You might need to water a bit their first year, but they seem to handle heat and humidity just fine once established. And when you get flowers, make sure to leave quite a few to generate the seeds for next year's show ... at that point, just let them do their thing and they'll happily move around a bit in the garden every year, giving you nice little patches of blue wherever they decide to take up residence. I really can't think of a single even mildly negative thing to say about Borage ... it's a bit of a colonizer, but without ever becoming invasive. Bees and Butterflies love it and flock to it, thus ensuring successful pollination. If this post piques your interest or imagination, do give it a try in your garden ... it will reward you richly, I'm sure!
Photos by Fernymoss, taken on June 24, 2008.