Photo: Amy Norwood |
Sterile
basil is the exception to this rule. The
flowers of sterile basil varieties don’t go to seed. So, in theory, you can keep the basil flowers
without affecting the plant’s leaf production.
In
searching online, I’ve found two sterile basil varieties (there may be others I
missed.) One is a generic variety called
African Blue Basil. The other is a
commercial cultivar called Amazel Basil.
I usually see Amazel Basil for sale in the spring at various Jefferson
County garden centers. I haven’t seen
African Blue, but I wasn’t looking for it particularly, either.
I’ve
grown Amazel Basil for several seasons now.
Until last season I dutifully pinched off the flowers, really just
because that’s what I had always done. Last
season, due to business and laziness, I let the flowers stay all season. This is what I learned from the experience.
First,
I thought the production and taste of the basil leaves was the same for
flowered and flower-free Amazel Basil.
But that assessment is based on my memory of past seasons when I pinched
the flowers. A more formal trial
situation, where plants are grown side by side and half are pinched and the
other half not, would give the most definitive answer to this question.
Second,
bees love basil flowers! If you want to
feed the bees while you feed yourself, leaving the flowers on your sterile
basil plant might be a good option. Last
season, so many types of bees visited my plants that I felt I had a bee
laboratory. I really enjoyed watching
them going about their business on the flowers.
Third,
by the end of the season, the flower spikes were huge, a foot or more in
length. Overall the plants were probably
twice as big as they would have been with pinched flowers. The problem with this was water
consumption. I grow basil in pots to
minimize earwig damage to the leaves (I’ve found growing in pots to be very
effective for this purpose.) But plants
grown in pots dry out more quickly than plants grown in the ground. By the end of our hot summer, I was watering my
giant basil plants twice a day to keep them from drooping. That got old pretty quickly. I considered cutting off the flowers, but I
didn’t want to upset the bees, so I didn’t.
I kept watering.
Finally,
I learned that Japanese beetles like basil flowers better than the leaves! Every morning during Japanese beetle season I
inspected my basil plants for beetles (basil is one of their favorite meals.) Every morning I found beetles in the flowers
and dispatched them on the spot. I never
found them on leaves and saw no leaf damage.
The usual remedy for Japanese beetles on basil plants is to cover the
plants with fine netting. That’s not so
difficult to do, but I did appreciate not having to do it last season.
Photo: Amy Norwood |
https://planttalk.colostate.edu/topics/annuals-perennials/1055-basil/