so lucky
Garden Master
Last year I grew that wonderful Toscono flat leafed kale, and tried to overwinter it (didn't try very hard). In the winter sometime, rabbits ate the kale down to the stalk nub, leaving inch-thick brown stalks standing in the garden. This spring early, I pulled out most of the old stalks and threw them in the compost pile.
Now I see that two plants that I didn't pull up are sprouting green from the bottom. Yea! I didn't lose it all!
So I glanced over to the compost pile and see two bare stalks sticking out of a bunch of rotting banana peels and egg shells. "Wonder if they are still alive?" I asked myself. So I pulled them out of the compost and felt the roots. They didn't feel any different than they did when I threw them in there, so I stuck them back in the ground with the other two that were growing.
So now I am wondering if the growing kale will just bolt to seed, like the overwintered collards (that never did squat all last year) is doing, or if it will produce edible kale again. Even if it goes to seed, I think I will try to protect and harvest the seed, because that seed is pretty expensive. Then at least maybe I can have kale next year.
Now I see that two plants that I didn't pull up are sprouting green from the bottom. Yea! I didn't lose it all!
So I glanced over to the compost pile and see two bare stalks sticking out of a bunch of rotting banana peels and egg shells. "Wonder if they are still alive?" I asked myself. So I pulled them out of the compost and felt the roots. They didn't feel any different than they did when I threw them in there, so I stuck them back in the ground with the other two that were growing.
So now I am wondering if the growing kale will just bolt to seed, like the overwintered collards (that never did squat all last year) is doing, or if it will produce edible kale again. Even if it goes to seed, I think I will try to protect and harvest the seed, because that seed is pretty expensive. Then at least maybe I can have kale next year.