sa国际传媒

Skip to content
Join our Newsletter

Pinch off buds to avoid bitter basil leaves

Q: Can you tell me how I will know when my basil and lavender are ready to cut and use? A: You can harvest basil as soon as you have enough leaves for what you need, while leaving enough on the plant to keep it alive.

Q: Can you tell me how I will know when my basil and lavender are ready to cut and use?

A: You can harvest basil as soon as you have enough leaves for what you need, while leaving enough on the plant to keep it alive. You can cut or pinch about one-third of the leaves off a young plant without harm.

Pruning produces a bushier, more productive plant, so continue to harvest basil throughout the growing season. Be sure to pinch off flower buds as soon as they appear so the leaves won't become bitter.

The best time to harvest lavender depends on how you intend to use it. Jody Byrne of DayBreak Lavender Farm in Streetsboro, Ohio, has these recommendations:

For culinary purposes or for making dried bouquets or crafts using fresh lavender, harvest when the buds are purple and fat but still tight, with no flowers open. For dried wreaths and arrangements, harvest when the flowers start to open. If you want to dry the lavender for its fragrance, wait until half the flowers on the spike have withered, so the oil will be more concentrated.

It's best to harvest lavender after noon on a lightly breezy, warm day, Byrne said. You want all dew to have dried off.