When the days get longer and milder those green thumbs start to twitch. If you’re wondering what vegetable to grow in March, our gardening experts have a tempting list of cool seasons crops you can start in your backyard in early spring.
It’s worth remember that some vegetables need to be planted after the last frost, while some can tolerate a moderate frost, meaning you can get them into the ground now, depending on where you live.
vegetable garden.
1. Brassicas
The brassica family of vegetables includes cabbage, kale, cauliflower and broccoli. These ‘super foods’ are packed with vital health-boosting nutrients, and as cool-season crops can be started from seed in March, ready to transplant next month.
‘If you live in a cold climate, where you experience frost, snow and freezing temperatures, and have a short growing season, then sowing seeds indoors can give you a head start to an earlier harvest,’ says Resh Gala, author of Vegetable Gardening Made Easy.
According to the experts at Gardening Know How: The Complete Guide to Vegetable Gardening you can start broccoli indoors six to eight weeks before the last frost date for a mid summer harvest. ‘Sow seeds 1/4 to 1/2 inch deep in a seed starting mix or soil pellets. Seeds generally germinate within four to seven days, when ambient temperatures remain between 45ºF-85ºF.’
‘You can start sowing vegetable seeds such as broccoli, cabbage and cauliflower indoors early in March in southern areas and later in the month in northern areas,’ adds Charlie Nardozzi, author, Month-by-Month Gardening New England.
‘Transplant broccoli, cabbage and cauliflower plants into individual containers, once their true leaves form. Thin out seedlings started in small pots, four-packs, or six-packs to the healthiest seedlings.’
‘Don’t wait too long to thin out your seedlings,’ adds Resh. ‘Too many seedlings growing in one container is a recipe for disaster. They will compete for nutrients and get stressed and stunted if they don’t have room to grow.’
For best results seedlings should be “hardened off” before transplanting outside. This is so they become accustomed to the drop in temperature and stand a better chance of survival.
When transplanting broccoli, cabbages and kale seedlings into the garden, the Gardening Know How experts suggest spacing seedings 12-24 inches apart to give the plants enough room to grow.
Sprouting Broccoli, Montebello Hybrid
Carrot, Kaleidoscope Blend
‘Lettuce can be started indoors in March,’ says Kate Copsey, author Month-by-Month Gardening New York & New Jersey. ‘These plants do not thrive in hot summer weather, so they yield better in early gardens.
‘Lettuce seedlings can then be transplanted into the garden in April. Or plant lettuce in containers and start hardening them off on bright March days. If a cold snap arrives, bring the container indoors for a day or two. In milder winter areas, the seedlings can be hardened off in late March.’
‘Looseleaf lettuce can be harvested forty to fifty days after planting,’ says Tony O’Neill. ‘Stagger planting every two weeks while the weather stays cool to ensure a steady lettuce supply. The last planting should be four weeks before the hot weather of summer begins.
If you like young spinach leaves in salads, this can also be started in March and takes around six weeks to mature.
‘Spinach can be planted in early spring or fall, depending on the climate,’ says Tony O’Neill. ‘Spinach likes cool weather and moist well-drained soil with a neutral pH. Seeds can be sown directly into the soil as soon as the ground is workable about 1/2 in (12mm) deep and two inches (5cm) apart.
‘Spinach plants should be thinned to three to four inches (8-10cm) apart when they have their first true leaves. Spinach can be harvested in as little as a month after planting, by cutting the outer leaves or the whole plant.
‘Maintain a soil pH of 6.5 to 6.8 for leafy greens; spinach is particularly sensitive to acidity.’
Spinach, Bloomsdale Long Standing
Bean, Bush, French Filet Stringless
‘This garlic is often a softneck variety and doesn’t need much cold exposure,’ explains John Côté at John Boy Farms, author of Growing Big Garlic. ‘The garlic varieties we offer are for late summer and fall, however, “spring garlic seed” can be purchased at garden centres.’
Onion, Patterson Hybrid
Price: $29.95
Quantity: 125 plants
Source: livingetc.com
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