Here's my current basil plants, behind the japanese maple. Pic taken a week or so ago.
Got these at Lowe's kind of late (I think late June-ish or early July) as little guys, but they just took off. The top landing of the steps behind them is 2-1/2' high, and if I recall correctly, they were maybe 8" tall when I got them.
At any rate, the garbage weather is fast approaching, and I'm puzzling over what to do. My original plan was to dig them up and put them in pots for the winter. But I'm kind of scratching my head over the size of them. Part of me just doesn't want the hassle of digging them up. Note the variegated variety doesn't flower or seed, so just harvesting seeds isn't an option. I thought I'd try a cutting, as it seems simple enough, with the plan to do more if this works. Cut a piece, trimmed the lower part of it, and put it into a clear glass of water - easy enough. I'm changing the water 2x a day.
I just started this a few days ago, and I know it will take like 4 weeks, but I'm not sure if the piece is happy or not. This morning, I thought some of the leaves looked droopy, so when I changed the water, I took a good look at the stem, and wasn't sure if I was supposed to see what I found. The very end where I took the cutting was dark brown. Part of me thought that this is likely the plant trying to heal its wound, so likely normal. But the somewhat drooping leaves made me hesitate - maybe this isn't a good thing. So I went to the next node and snipped again, and put it back into fresh water. This evening, though, I think more of the leaves look a big droopy. Here's a pic:
You can see at this point the leaves themselves don't look bad - they're not curled up or wilting, per se. They're just more down than perky. I've got them on the counter next to a window, but we've had several gloomy days, so I'm partially thinking it might just need more light. And part of me thinks I'm just worrying like a mother hen - I should just keep changing the water 2x a day and see what happens. After all, that was the original goal of this exercise. I think part of my paranoia is coming from the fact that we are supposed to hit the low 40's (F) at night this weekend, and so I know "the end is near." In other words, it might really just be impatience rearing its ugly head.
So my question for those of you who have experience with doing cuttings - is the end turning brown this quickly normal? Is some drooping normal? Is there anything else I should be aware of as the changes take place over the next several weeks? I did send an email to the nursery that grows these, but haven't heard back from them. I will try calling if I don't hear back from them by the end of the week, but wanted to run this by you first.
Thanks in advance for any advice you can provide!
G

Got these at Lowe's kind of late (I think late June-ish or early July) as little guys, but they just took off. The top landing of the steps behind them is 2-1/2' high, and if I recall correctly, they were maybe 8" tall when I got them.
At any rate, the garbage weather is fast approaching, and I'm puzzling over what to do. My original plan was to dig them up and put them in pots for the winter. But I'm kind of scratching my head over the size of them. Part of me just doesn't want the hassle of digging them up. Note the variegated variety doesn't flower or seed, so just harvesting seeds isn't an option. I thought I'd try a cutting, as it seems simple enough, with the plan to do more if this works. Cut a piece, trimmed the lower part of it, and put it into a clear glass of water - easy enough. I'm changing the water 2x a day.
I just started this a few days ago, and I know it will take like 4 weeks, but I'm not sure if the piece is happy or not. This morning, I thought some of the leaves looked droopy, so when I changed the water, I took a good look at the stem, and wasn't sure if I was supposed to see what I found. The very end where I took the cutting was dark brown. Part of me thought that this is likely the plant trying to heal its wound, so likely normal. But the somewhat drooping leaves made me hesitate - maybe this isn't a good thing. So I went to the next node and snipped again, and put it back into fresh water. This evening, though, I think more of the leaves look a big droopy. Here's a pic:

You can see at this point the leaves themselves don't look bad - they're not curled up or wilting, per se. They're just more down than perky. I've got them on the counter next to a window, but we've had several gloomy days, so I'm partially thinking it might just need more light. And part of me thinks I'm just worrying like a mother hen - I should just keep changing the water 2x a day and see what happens. After all, that was the original goal of this exercise. I think part of my paranoia is coming from the fact that we are supposed to hit the low 40's (F) at night this weekend, and so I know "the end is near." In other words, it might really just be impatience rearing its ugly head.
So my question for those of you who have experience with doing cuttings - is the end turning brown this quickly normal? Is some drooping normal? Is there anything else I should be aware of as the changes take place over the next several weeks? I did send an email to the nursery that grows these, but haven't heard back from them. I will try calling if I don't hear back from them by the end of the week, but wanted to run this by you first.
Thanks in advance for any advice you can provide!
G