Important notes
whole leaves swallowed: Bay leaves are not poisonous, but they stay stiff and sharp-edged even after cooking. Swallowed whole they can lodge in the throat or scratch the oesophagus or gut — always remove them before serving. Ground bay leaf carries no such risk. ↗
leaves eaten: Toxic to cats: the essential oils (mainly eugenol) irritate the gut — vomiting and diarrhoea. Cats break phenols down poorly, so even a few leaves can make them ill. Keep the plant out of reach. ↗
leaves eaten: Also toxic to dogs and horses (eugenol, essential oils): vomiting and diarrhoea; a large amount of whole leaves can cause an obstruction. ↗
repeated skin contact with leaves/oil: The essential oil (sesquiterpene lactones, eugenol) can cause contact dermatitis in sensitive people — wear gloves when pruning larger plants. ↗
Luz
Full sun to partial shade, ideally a warm, sheltered spot out of the wind. Indoors, give it the brightest place you have — too little light and shoots grow long and thin. Reintroduce it to full sun gradually after winter or the leaves will scorch.
Riego
Let the top 2-3 cm dry out between waterings, then water thoroughly and empty the saucer. In a container that means roughly every 2-4 days in summer and only every 2-3 weeks in winter quarters, just enough that the rootball never dries out completely. Waterlogging is the most common cause of death — err on the dry side.
Temperatura
15-27 °C is ideal. An established bay tolerates about -5 to -7 °C briefly; below that the leaves scorch, and around -10 °C the plant dies back. A container rootball freezes through far faster than garden soil — move it into winter quarters (cool and bright, 3-10 °C) once it drops to about 5 °C, or wrap the pot and put it against a house wall.
Humedad
Undemanding: 40-60 % relative humidity is plenty, and outdoors humidity is a non-issue. Indoors, dry heated air is what invites scale insects — a cool overwintering spot beats a warm living room.
Valores objetivo por método y fase
| Fase | pH | EC (mS/cm) | Agua °C | Aire °C | Humedad % | Luz h | Duración (días) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Germinación | 6–7 | — | — | 18–22 | 60–70 | 12 | 75 |
| Plántula | 6–7 | — | — | 15–25 | 50–65 | 14 | 120 |
| Vegetativo | 6–7 | — | — | 15–27 | 40–60 | 14 | 365 |
| Floración | 6–7 | — | — | 15–25 | 40–60 | 14 | 30 |
| Fructificación | 6–7 | — | — | 15–27 | 40–60 | 14 | 150 |
| care_guide.stages.dormant | 6–7 | — | — | 3–10 | 40–70 | 8 | 120 |
Problemas comunes
Curled, thickened leaf margins = bay sucker (harmless but ugly — pick the leaves off). Sticky leaves with a black film = scale insects plus sooty mould, typical after a winter indoors. Yellow, blotchy leaves on wet soil = waterlogging and root rot. Brown, crisp leaf edges after winter = frost or sun scorch; prune in late spring and it reliably reshoots.
Space & Size
- Final height
- 200 cm
- Final width
- 120 cm
- Spacing
- 90 cm
- Root depth
- 40 cm
- Min. container (Tierra)
- ≥ 30 L
Pests & diseases
| Pest / Disease | Symptom | Organic treatment |
|---|---|---|
| Bay sucker (Trioza alacris) | leaf margins curl, thicken and turn pale yellow, later brown and drop; grey nymphs in white wax hide under the curled edge | Pick off and bin affected leaves, hose down the leaf undersides, encourage ladybirds. Vigour is barely affected — control is mostly cosmetic. |
| Scale insects | brown bumps on veins and stems, sticky honeydew and black sooty mould — especially indoors over winter | scrape off or dab with alcohol on a cotton bud, treat with a rapeseed-oil spray, keep winter quarters cool and bright |
| Root rot (waterlogging) | yellow, blotchy leaves and wilting shoots despite wet soil; dark, soft roots — the number one killer of container bay, especially in winter | empty the saucer, water far less in winter, repot into a free-draining mix with grit |
| Sooty mould | black film that wipes off the leaves — it grows on the honeydew of scale and suckers, not on the plant itself | deal with the cause (the sap-suckers), wash leaves with lukewarm water |
Edible parts
- Leaves · edible from Vegetativo — flavouring — cook with it, remove before serving; dried is mellower than fresh
- Fruit · edible from Fructificación — bay berries are not a culinary spice — only pressed for laurel oil (e.g. Aleppo soap)
Técnicas de rendimiento
Don't harvest properly until the second year, or you weaken the young plant. Pick individual mature leaves — the dark green, leathery ones carry the aroma; pale young ones have little. Being evergreen, it can be harvested year-round. For a bigger batch, prune in late spring and dry the trimmings. Dry leaves flat between sheets of paper (otherwise they curl) and store airtight; the flavour turns rounder and less bitter after a few weeks of drying.
Propagation & pollination
- Method
- semi_ripe_cutting
- Germination time
- 75 days
- Germination temp
- 18-22 °C
- Sowing depth
- 1 cm
- Pollination
- cross
- Hand pollination needed
- no
Cuttings are the usual route: semi-ripe shoots in late summer, 10-15 cm, several months to root. Seed works but is slow and erratic — 2-3 months, and 4-6 weeks of cold stratification at 4-5 °C helps; the pulp must be removed completely as it inhibits germination. Layering also works (about a year).
Companion planting
🟢 Good neighbours: Rosemary, Thyme, Oregano, Sage
🔴 Bad neighbours: Peppermint
Bay fits any Mediterranean herb bed (rosemary, thyme, oregano, sage) — same needs: sun, lean free-draining soil, drying out between waterings. Don't pair it with permanently moist heavy feeders. Dried bay leaves in the pantry are a traditional deterrent against flour moths and grain weevils.
Flavor
warm, resinous and savoury with a eucalyptus-like freshness and a slightly bitter finish; drier and mellower than fresh, and it only opens up during long, slow cooking
Storage
Store dried leaves airtight, dark and dry — they stay aromatic for about a year. Fresh leaves keep for a few weeks in a sealed box in the fridge. Larger quantities freeze well.
History
Few plants sit so deep in our language. In Greek myth the nymph Daphne turns into a laurel tree to escape Apollo, and the laurel has been Apollo's sacred tree ever since. Victors, poets and Roman generals wore the laurel wreath — and the words stuck: 'baccalaureate' and 'bachelor' trace back to bacca lauri (laurel berry), the poeta laureatus is the laurel-crowned poet, and anyone 'resting on their laurels' is resting on exactly that wreath. In the Middle Ages the tree was believed to ward off lightning.
Nutrition
You don't eat bay, you season with it — so the per-100 g figures (high in manganese, iron, vitamin A and C) are statistics rather than nutrition: one leaf weighs under a gram and leaves the pot again. What matters are the essential oils (about 1.3 %, mostly cineole/eucalyptol plus eugenol), which carry the aroma and are traditionally credited with aiding digestion.
Sources
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