November 13, 2024

VIDEO: MASSIVE All Year Round BASIL Plant That Lives For YEARS!


In this video, I show you a giant All-Year-Round BASIL Plant That Lives For YEARS in a raised garden bed container. This variety of basil keeps growing and producing non-stop.

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Self Sufficient Me is based on our small 3-acre property/homestead in SE Queensland Australia about 45kms north of Brisbane – the climate is subtropical (similar to Florida). I started Self Sufficient Me in 2011 as a blog website project where I document and write about backyard food growing, self-sufficiency, and urban farming in general. I love sharing my foodie and DIY adventures online so come along with me and let’s get into it! Cheers, Mark 🙂

25 thoughts on “VIDEO: MASSIVE All Year Round BASIL Plant That Lives For YEARS!

  1. This is my favourite type of basil it grows really fast tastes great my neighbours had a huge tree of it growing over my fence and I kept using a little here and there and would place a stem in a glass on the bench to keep fresh and on threw roots so I planted it and not even a year later it stands nearly six ft tall and about 4ft around and has been a staple in my kitchen ever since I found it it's extremely hardy loves a good trim and produces an absolute tone of foliage to use and smells great in the garden too

  2. Lots of perennial basils are sterile hybrids, including the African Blue, and I suspect this one you're growing. They're very easy to propagate from tender cuttings – I usually do it in water.

  3. You’ve changed my life man. Got me into gardening and, more importantly, self-sufficiency. I’ve not only learned how “to grow a ton of vej” but I’ve learned how keep chickens and quail, to use various power tools and construction techniques building coops and garden beds, and even how to maintain and in many cases repair my own vehicles. Thank you for starting me on the path. I will continue to watch every video you release!

  4. I'm growing basil indoors (I think it's sweet basil) and I want to let one plant flower so I can collect seeds. I've only recently started growing herbs and such so I'm very new to it all. My question is do I need to hand pollinate the flowers to get seeds? I know I have to hand pollinate my tomato and sweet pepper plants but I don't know if I need to do that with herbs since they don't get fruits.

  5. Mark, I made the horrible mistake of planting mint in one end of my garden. I am resting right now after forking up the twisted tangles of strong roots running into my chives. Mint has taken ownership of half my garden. I don’t mind. I want the other half mint free. Maybe, should I bury a barrier to block the roots?

  6. Love basil in salad. Funny, I do not like aniseed (that licorice flavour), but love the zing that fresh annual basil gives a salad or tomato sandwich. I have had it come up from self sown seed.

  7. I've only recently come across your channel , and a BIG thumbs up to your efforts. As a rule , I hate listening to Englanders , but Australian is so much better . Your videos are well thought out and easy to understand . Keep up the great work !!!

  8. Taking basil cuttings is so easy. I turned one plant into a dozen in less than a year. You just put a piece with 2-3 leaves and a decent stem in some water in a sunny window and wait. (A few days to a few weeks depending on the season) and then once a good root system forms you just plant it in a pot. (Or in the ground)
    I just tried seeds for the first time and had a near 100% success rate. Which I was not anticipating and now I have too much basil. If Basil was money id be Bezos.

  9. I love my perennial basil plant(s)! I bought a tiny one a year ago, and it grew like mad — so much so that I've propagated it through cuttings about 20 times now. Some of these little basils have thrived even in the most garbage soils in the most rock hard, depleted parts of my garden (and they have since conditioned the soil really beautifully and brought worms back to those parts). Amazing plant, and delicious to boot — I personally love the extra kick a pesto gets when made from perennial basil!

  10. This perennial variety certainly doesn't grow like Thai basil. I had a plant last year, that died off due to hard freeze. I've been finding baby plants everywhere. Been digging them up and giving them away to neighbors. Still have a bunch, and still finding new ones growing in odd places.

  11. Has anyone else ever seen parrots high on basil seeds? Not from this type of basil, obviously. Funniest thing you'll ever see. We had some seeding near our back door. So we went out there one day – Lo! and Behold! a group of about 15 lorikeets and rosellas, absolutely hoeing into the seeds and rolling around like drunk sailors. We could walk straight up to them and they were absolutely 'flying', just rolling around by our feet. We were wetting ourselves laughing. I've always kept basil since, in remembrance of the parrot 'reefer madness' day.

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