That word has many possible meanings these days; you’ve
likely heard it lately in the saying, “Spring has sprung.” I recall my father using it to mean something
badly warped or bent out of its normal shape and not recovering. So at least in our corner of Michigan , this spring
is, apparently, “sprung.”
But true to my calendar, I started the first of this year’s Tendersweet
F1 cabbage, Diplomat F1 broccoli, and Red Russian kale on a heat mat set for 75
degrees in my chilly basement just a couple hours after the Vernal Equinox this
past Thursday. (If you haven’t started
some, it’s definitely not too late!) The
Red Russian (Brassica napus pabularia)
is a different species from all of the other popular kales. It’s quite sweet, and my clear favorite for
eating fresh and raw, in salads or just rolled up and munched right in the
garden. The Tendersweet is true to its
name, and we’ll see about the Diplomat—I haven’t previously tried it.
I planted three seeds per cell in a sterilized plastic cell
tray, covered them with about 1/8 inch of milled sphagnum, moistened them
gently, and covered the tray with clear plastic to hold in the moisture. By this morning, at least one seed in each
cell (all three in most) had germinated and had nice green cotyledons unfolding. I took them off the heat and put them just an
inch or so under fluorescent lights just inside the basement window. I’ll thin to one plant per cell as soon as
their first true leaves are growing well. A
few cells had tiny white spots of fungus growing in spite of my efforts to
sterilize the trays and planting tweezers; and I used a good fresh commercial starter mix. I carefully spritzed them with cool chamomile
tea, which should discourage the fungus.
Here’s a typical cell of the cabbages:
With care and luck, these should be ready to transplant outdoors by about the first of May or when our soil temperature climbs into the upper 40's, whichever comes first.
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