Versatile Kale

Kale is one of my favorite plants for many reasons. It’s nutritious, and great tasting, especially for the home gardener who can grow choice varieties and harvest the fresh leaves when they are young and tender. Kale is very hardy and can survive through the extremes of both hot and cold weather.

Delicious Kale Greens Grow Almost Year-Round

A single planting in the spring will produce fresh greens from April through December, with little care required. Kale plants easily survive frigid Pennsylvania winters in the open without protection. Each spring I have mature three-foot tall and two-foot wide plants in my garden that survived through the winter and are loaded with tasty greens.

To top it off, kale is a very ornamental plant, which can be cultivated in a variety of colors, shapes, and leaf textures. It’s also a great plant to incorporate into an ornamental vegetable garden, and some types can even be used to add interest and variety to your favorite flowerbeds.

I usually make two plantings of kale, one in early spring, and another in late summer. Kale can be started indoors, or planted directly into the garden. It is not troubled much by insect pests, but is sometimes attacked by aphids and cabbageworms in the fall, however these pests can be easily controlled.

Favorite Ornamental and Flavorful Kale Varieties

My favorite varieties of kale seeds are “Wild Kale Mix” and “Tuscan Black Palm Kale”. The wild kale mix will supply you with a wide range of colors and leaf shapes from a single packet of seed for this tasty variety. Black Palm kale, also known as Lacinato, Dinosaur kale, or Nero Di Toscana, is the favored variety grown in Italy. It can grow four feet tall and has dark bluish green leaves that whorl around the plant in a manner like the leaves of a palm tree. The leaves also have a unique texture that is crinkled with a blistered appearance.

Other popular kale seed varieties include: Red Russian, Siberian, Red Ursa, White Russian, Dwarf Blue Curled Scotch, Konserva, Redbor, Winterbor, Premier, Hanover Salad and Starbor.

For more details on growing versatile kales and other delicious vegetables to create a productive and ornamental vegetable garden pick up the “Amazing Secrets to Growing Luscious Fruits and Vegetables at Home.”



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This entry was posted on Thursday, September 8th, 2005 at 11:03 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.

5 Responses to “Versatile Kale”

  1. Garden Log 8-3-06 » Veggie Gardening Tips Says:

    [...] The summer isn’t half way over and temperatures reached triple digits today but I’ve already begun planning and planting my fall vegetable garden. Last week I sowed seeds of rutabagas, turnips, and various kale varieties directly into an empty raised bed. [...]

  2. Green Thumb » Blog Archives » Plant & Gardening Tips @ HortChat.com Says:

    [...] Versatile Kale Veggie Gardening TipsKale is one of my favorite plants for many reasons. It s nutritious, and great tasting, especially for the home gardener who can grow choice varieties and harvest the fresh leaves when they are [...]

  3. Natural Living Cuisine » Blog Archive » Kale Says:

    [...] is easy to grow and yields a rewarding crop. Visit this wonderful site Veggie Gardening Tips for information on how to grow kale and other wonderful vegetables, fruits and [...]

  4. Barbara Barnes Says:

    where can I order Tuscan black palm kale

  5. Kenny Point Says:

    Barbara, there are a number of heirloom seed suppliers that carry black palm kale seeds. Try Nichols Garden Nursery or Seeds from Italy. It is also known as Lacinato kale.

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