Growing Cabbages

I received a recent request from a gardener asking for tips on growing cabbages in the home garden. Cabbage is a cole crop that’s closely related to kale, collards, broccoli, and Brussels Sprouts.

Instead of forming loose leaves along its stem the cabbage leaves wrap around and fold over each other to form a dense head of layered leaves. Cabbages are heavy feeders and appreciate a fertile soil enriched with good compost or a balanced organic fertilizer.

Tips for Growing Delicious Cabbage Heads

Cabbages grow best during cool weather and are usually planted as a spring or fall crop to avoid growing during the heat of summer. While the cabbage seeds can be sown directly into the garden’s soil, you’ll get better results from seedlings started indoors under lights or purchased as transplants.

Plant the seeds indoors about four to six weeks before you intend to set them out into the garden. Cabbage plants are frost tolerant and can be planted in the garden very early in the spring. For a fall crop transplant the seedlings into the garden during mid to late summer depending on the variety and the recommended days to maturity.

The key to growing great cabbages is to provide a rich soil and to irrigate as required to insure that the plants have all the nutrients and moisture needed for rapid and uninterrupted growth.

Terrific Cabbage Varieties for the Home Garden

For the home gardener, and for growing cabbages in raised beds I prefer the smaller sized varieties such as Early Jersey Wakefield, Red Acre, Greyhound, Winningstadt, Cour Di Blue, and Golden Acre, which all produce sweet and tender, compact heads that can be spaced closer together in the garden.

For larger cabbages and fall harvests plant Mammoth Red Rock, Brunswick, Premium Late Flat Dutch, Copenhagen Market, or one of the many Savoy varieties such as January King, Vertus, Perfection Drumhead, or Chieftain.

Care and Harvesting of Organic Cabbages

Cabbage Worms are the main pest but they can be easily controlled organically by hand picking or through occasional applications of BT (Bacillus thuringiensis).

Heads can be harvested whenever they reach the desired size but will also hold nicely in the garden after the cabbages reach maturity.

Heads left in the garden too long will often begin to split. You can slow maturity and delay splitting by pruning the roots. Simply drive a spade into the soil around the heads to sever the roots of the growing cabbage plants.



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This entry was posted on Tuesday, May 2nd, 2006 at 9:08 pm and is filed under Cultivating Leafy Greens. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.

10 Responses to “Growing Cabbages”

  1. Aurora Says:

    Hello, Kenny.

    Just want to let you know how much I enjoy reading your logs since I discovered them a couple of days ago. I bookmarked your site and plan to visit it regularly.

    Although I am not a vegetable gardener nor am I a cook, I love vegetables and someday hope to grow them myself. For now I just tend to my many houseplants and sometimes have some herbs growing inside and by my front door. Since I really know little about cooking, I just usually dream about the day when I can…hahaha.

    I discovered your site when I was researching about chickweed, which I had a lot of. I was telling my son that I think the weeds that I have are edible, but he won’t let me try to eat them…bossy son. :) Your site assured me that they are indeed chickweeds and edible, so I have to wait for them to grow again, and I’ll steam some. I had just pulled out A LOT of them just before I found your site :(

    Anyway, I can tell that you make a lot of people so happy with your website. Thank you very much. I am so hungry for some fresh vegetables after reading your log.

    Be happy and healthy.

    Sincerely,
    Aurora

  2. Susan Says:

    My cabbage plants are not forming a head just lots of healthy leaves- any ideas what I need to do?

  3. Kenny Point Says:

    The healthy leaves are a good sign, just keep the cabbage plants watered and fertilized and the heads should begin to form soon, provided those really are cabbage plants and not just collard greens! :)

  4. Dan M. Says:

    Summer comes early in Kentucky, Can you prevent splitting heads by tying together the leaves? Thanks in advance.

  5. Kenny Point Says:

    Dan, I don’t think that tying the leaves will help solve your problem with the cabbages splitting or extend the time that you have to harvest them. Some growers use a sharp spade to slice straight down into the soil along a couple sides of the cabbage plant. This severs some of the plant’s roots, slows the head’s growth, and helps prevent the cabbages from splitting.

  6. Peter Says:

    Hello,

    great article.

    If you want you can add it to Garlicoon, the Food & Wine network.

    http://www.garlicoon.com

  7. Karen Anderson Says:

    Im a very novice gargener. I’ve planted some red & green cabbages and both are looking great but dont have any heads on them, just great big leaves. Have they bolted? If so what causes this. Weve had a lot of rain recently is that it?

  8. Kenny Point Says:

    Hi Karen, your cabbages sound like they are doing just fine to me. Sometimes it takes a while for the heads to begin to develop, but cabbages aren’t prone to bolting as easily as other greens such as lettuces. The cabbages haven’t bolted unless the plants start developing pronounced upright growth, or the heads split and send up a stalk.

  9. Angela Says:

    Could you please tell me what might be wrong with my cabbage? I planted red and green and all the green ones have something wrong with them. From the outside they look fine when you peel back the leaves instead of a large head there are seven or eight small heads about the size of a baseball. Every plant is like this.

  10. Kenny Point Says:

    Hi Angela, it sounds like your cabbage plants may have been stressed and tried to bolt or resorted to emergency growth mode. Sometimes the stems will sprout multiple heads like that after the main heads has been harvested and the plant tries to continue growing. Could the growth of your cabbage plants have been interrupted by drought or excessive heat as the plants were developing? Did you time your plantings to allow for the cabbages to grow and mature during the cooler time of year in your growing region?

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