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Harvest to Table

Harvest to Table

A practical guide to food in the garden and market

How to Grow Kale

Filed under: How to Grow, Tagged as: ,

Kale is a cool-weather crop that requires two months of cool weather to reach harvest. Sow seeds indoors or outdoors 4 to 6 weeks before the last frost in spring or as soon as the soil can be worked. Kale is commonly started indoors and transplanted into the garden when seedlings are 4 to 6 weeks old.

 

How to prepare and cook kale: click here.

 

Description. Kale is a hardy biennial plant grown as an annual. The leaves of kale are similar to cabbage. Scotch kale has crumpled and curly gray-green leaves. Siberian or blue kale is less curly and a bluer shade of green.

 

Yield. Plant 4 to 5 plants per household member.

 

Site. Kale prefers rich, well-drained soil with a soil pH between 5.5 and 6.8. Plant kale in full sun; plant kale in partial shade in warm regions. For optimal flavor, grow kale in cool weather.

 

Planting time.  Kale is a cool-weather crop that can tolerate temperatures as low as 20°F. Kale does not tolerate heat. Direct seed or transplant kale so that it comes to harvest before day time temperatures exceed 80°F. In cool-summer regions, plant kale in early spring for a summer to early fall harvest. In warm- and hot-summer regions, plant kale in late summer for harvest in late fall or winter. In mild-winter regions, kale can be sown in fall for winter harvest.

 

Planting and spacing. Sow kale seed ½ inch deep spaced 3 inches apart; thin plants to 12 inches apart when they are 4 to 5 inches tall. Space rows 18 to 24 inches apart. Set transplants with crooked stems up to the first leaves.

Water and feeding. Keep kale well watered for sustained growth and to keep leaves from getting too tough. Add aged-compost to planting beds in advance of planting. Side dress kale with aged compost every 6 weeks.

 

Companion plants. Beets, celery, herbs, onions, and potatoes. Not pole beans, strawberries, tomatoes.

 

Care. Mound straw around kale once it is 6 inches high to prevent plants from touching the soil; soil easily sticks to kale's often crinkled leaves.

 

Container growing. Kale will grow in a 6-inch container. Plant kale on 8-inch centers in large containers. Move kale grown in containers into cool shade when the weather warms to extend the season.

 

Pests. Kale can be attacked by cutworms, cabbage loopers, and imported cabbage worms. Control these pests by hand picking or spry with Bacillus thuringiensis.

 

Diseases. Kale has no serious disease problems.

 

Harvest. Kale will be ready for harvest 55 days from transplanting, 70 to 80 days from seed. Cut individual leaves for use when the plant is 8 to 10 inches high; cut the outside leaves first. If you harvest the entire plant, cut 2 inches above the soil and the plant will sprout new leaves in 1 to 2 weeks. Harvest kale before it gets old and tough.

 

Varieties. Blue Armor (45-75 days, hybrid); Blue Curled Scotch (65 days); Blue Knight (55 days, hybrid); Dwarf Blue Curled (55 days); Dwarf Blue Scotch (55 days);  Dwarf Green Curled (60 days); Dwarf Siberian (65 days); Greenpeace (65 days); Hanover Late Seedling (68 days); Konserva (60 days); Red Russian (40-60 days); Squire (60 days); Verdura (60 days); Winterbor (60-65 days, hybrid).

 

Storing and preserving. Leave kale in the garden until you are ready to use it. Its flavor will be sweetened by frost. Kale will keep in the refrigerator for 1 to 2 weeks in a plastic bag. Kale can also be frozen, canned, or dried.

 

Common name. Kale, borecole

Botanical name. Brassica oleracea acephala

Origin. Hybrid

 

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  • Plant origin and history.
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1 Comment | Leave a comment

Kale greens can be used so many ways in the kitchen that every garden should grow some. Freezing is the best preservation method. Garden Harvest Supply is an excellent source for potted Kale plants.

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