Jay Angler wrote:The Question: Can I get them to produce seed and save it? Each pot appears to have several individual plants.
The short answer is, "
yes"! The seeds are practically microscopic (OK, I'm exaggerating a little, but they're much smaller than kale seeds, which I already consider small,) but I got lots of them. I suspect the pots my DiL bought had seed spread on the soil and were multiple plants coming up.
Eventually, I sent one home with her, and kept the second until it was looking a bit sad. Then I tried transplanting it into a pot outside, and it hasn't died, but I wouldn't say it's thrived, which may relate to my next basil adventure... read on...
My friend had to go to the interior due to her mother being ill. They were there for some time, and wanted some basil, so they bought one of those
"live in a pot at the grocery store" basil plants. I would guess what is called, "Sweet Basil"? Certainly nothing exotic, no label, but it has a lovely smell. Again, it was pot bound and appeared to have been raised hydroponically. She insisted I rescue it. She'd brought it home, but she already had a much nicer indoor basil plant. Bad family stuff had happened and she didn't want to kill this new plant - she wanted to rehome it.
I have tried to raise sweet basil in the past. My sister and my mother were both able to raise it, but their ecosystem is very different than mine. The only person I'd met locally with one, grew theirs in a greenhouse. Mine always struggled in the garden, and barely grew. But I agreed to try to rescue my friend's new basil plant.
Step one: give it a haircut and transplant it.
Step two: put it in the sunny south window under my plant light.
Step three: check the soil - dry - water it.
Step four: check the soil - dry - water it.
Step five: give it a haircut, check the soil - dry - water it.
Repeat steps 3 to five, again, and again, and again.
My conclusion. Basil is a water plant. It wants to be watered constantly. Every bit of water and light you give it, will turn into leaves within a day or two. I can only let it grow to about 1 foot tall because of other plants under the light. There are some plants that seem to grow better the more often they're harvested and this Basil seems to be quite OK with this approach.
I suspect all my prior issues with growing basil, related to my failure to give it the incredible amount of water it wants.
I guess I'm not too old to learn something new!