Growing Nasturtiums for Flowers, Food and Pest Control

, written by Barbara Pleasant us flag

Nasturtium blossoms

Along with tomatoes and peppers, nasturtiums were one of the treasures brought to Europe from South America by early plant explorers. The whole plant was eaten by the Incas as a salad vegetable, but it was the exotic flowers, and the ease of breeding new colors, that pushed the popularity of nasturtiums. King Louis XIV had them planted at his palace at Versailles, and three centuries later seed catalogs began offering nasturtium varieties by the dozen.

The early 1900s were the heyday of garden nasturtiums, but today they are making a comeback for several reasons. Beautiful, easy to grow and available in a range of types and colors, nasturtiums produce tasty edible flowers and do double duty as trap crops for cabbageworms and black bean aphids.

“Vintage
Nasturtiums have long been hugely popular in home gardens

Growing Nasturtiums

Nasturtium seeds are as big as dried peas, so they are easy to handle and often recommended for children’s gardening projects. I like starting the seeds in small pots so I can quickly set the plants where I want them to grow, but direct-seedling will work provided you keep the soil moist for a week. Be adventurous in your choice of varieties, which vary in growth habit and flower color. Smaller varieties like ‘Little Gem’ are great in containers, and the white variegated leaves of ‘Alaska’ are especially interesting when viewed up close. Varieties called climbing nasturtiums can be trained to cover a fence or tumble down a wall, while standard selections grow into teeming mounds.

It’s easy to make a case for growing nasturtiums among your vegetables. They may repel some cucurbit pests when grown near cucumbers or squash, and nasturtium leaves and stems forms a lush green groundcover that deters weeds. Bees and hummingbirds eagerly gather nasturtium nectar, which is hidden in the long spur at the back of the flower. The striking petal markings in varieties like ‘Peach Melba’ or ‘Orchid Cream’ are intended to point pollinators to the flowers’ centers.

“Nasturtium
’Peach Melba’ nasturtiums are used here to deter pests from cucumbers.

Nasturtiums as a Trap Crop

In most gardens in most years, nasturtiums will sail through their long bloom time with few problems from pests. However, in places where cabbage white butterflies are present while cabbage family crops are absent, the cabbage whites will often lay their eggs on nasturtiums instead.

This often happens late in the season, which provides a unique opportunity to intervene in the cabbage white butterfly’s life cycle by dispatching wormy plants to an enclosed composter or active compost pile. Cabbage worms are incapable of seeking out new host plants, so they perish along with the nasturtiums.

In Europe, the Pacific Northwest, and many other cool temperate climates, nasturtiums may become infested with tiny black aphids that are so small that it almost looks like dark soil has splashed onto leaf undersides. Commonly called black bean aphids, many gardeners find early infestations easy to spot and terminate on nasturtiums compared to the aphids’ favorite plant, broad beans (fava beans). With nasturtiums, you can pick off infested leaves, stems and branches and chop them into a compost pile. This is less traumatic than when the aphids are on your beans, poppies, or dahlias.

“Nasturtium
’Alaska’ and a few other varieties feature leaves variegated with white.

Using Nasturtiums Leaves and Flowers in the Kitchen

Edible nasturtium blossoms are great for bringing lively color to the plate, and they contain as much vitamin C as parsley, and more lutein than tomatoes. Even if all you do is toss them into a smoothie, nasturtium blossoms are good for you. Gather newly opened flowers in the cool of the morning, and store them in roomy plastic bags in the refrigerator for up to two days. Just before using them, pinch off the back of the flower to remove the spur and center, which often taste bitter. The petals are the best part.

Nasturtium leaves have a spicy, watercress-like flavor, and they make interesting greenery for lining serving plates, or you can chop small amounts into summer salads. Some people dry the leaves and use them to add color and peppery flavor to homemade seasoning salts. Or, you can blanch them and puree them into nasturtium pesto. The plump immature seeds can be pickled, but like nasturtium leaves they contain high levels of oxalic acid, and should be eaten only in small amounts.

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Comments

 
"Thanks for broadening my nasturtium horizon, Barbara! Learned so much from this post."
Cathy Barash on Sunday 27 May 2018
"Will squirrels leave them alone? I've the perfect spot, but it's not squirrel proof. Thank you. "
Kathy Minges on Monday 28 May 2018
"Kathy, if you protect the plants while they are young with a chicken wire cover, you should be able to grow nasturtiums in the company of squirrels. Other possibilities include geraniums, marigolds or petunias. Good luck!"
Barbara Pleasant on Wednesday 13 June 2018
"thank you for sharing information, very useful for me. "
jasa basmi rayap murah on Saturday 17 November 2018
"I can grow beautiful foliage but mine don't flower. I've read this is common if the soil is too lush with nutrients. Problem is I grow them with cucumbers and fertilize my cucumbers. This confuses me as I see flowering nasturtium paired with cukes all the time in photos. Do people not fertilize their cucumbers or am I doing something else wrong? "
Deb on Wednesday 10 June 2020
"Deb, because cucumbers are not heavily fertilized, and don't think overfeeding is the problem so much as heat. Many nasturtiums will not bloom when the weather gets hot, then go back into bloom when nights become cooler. They bloom non-stop only in places that have cool nights most of the summer."
Barbara Pleasant on Thursday 11 June 2020
"Ahhh okay maybe that's it. Perhaps the cucumbers shade them enough to bloom a little more? If I keep these plants healthy and they make it to fall, perhaps they'll bloom then? At least the lush greenery is nice so far lol"
Deb on Friday 12 June 2020
"I live in zone 9, Waller, Tx. During the summer it is extremely hot. Will Nasturtiums flower for me if I plant them in the shade? I have 10 beehives and need to keep as many flowering plants as possible to keep my bees happy. "
Ingrid on Wednesday 20 January 2021
"Hi I have a nightmare with aphids on my roses (mid England) someone told me nasturtiums are great to act as a sacrifice plant to get all the aphids, do you know does it have to be the tall varieties or will the small 30cm height ones work as well, as I only have place for a pot. Thanks Natalie"
Natalie Dodson on Sunday 19 September 2021
"I planted nasturtiums in my veg garden as trap plants. They are full of tiny black aphids, and I thought, great, this was working! Until I started to remove them and discovered they were also hosting ladybugs, ladybug pupa and larvae. Now what to do? And, did I actually attract the aphids by planting nasturtiums? I live in zone 9. Thank you, any advice will be appreciated! "
Jeano on Wednesday 2 March 2022
"Hi, please could you tell me your source re the information about oxalic acid in Nasturtium leaves? "
Carol on Thursday 2 May 2024

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