September 28, 2024

VIDEO: How to Grow Kale and Other Brassicas from Seed – Easy Guide


Support HuwsNursery on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/huwsnursery
Brassicas are a fantastic crop especially for cooler climate vegetable gardens because they provide a fresh supply of greens through the cold winter months. This video goes through the steps of growing kale and other brassicas from seed from preparing the seed bed to after transplanting. Use the seed packet guide for spacing of the plants. If you have any further questions they do not hesitate to ask!

Instagram: huws_nursery
Snapchat: huwsnursery
Facebook page: https://www.facebook.com/HuwsGardenNursery
Subscribe to our newsletter with updates and exclusive content:
http://huwsnursery.com/join

Keywords:
Brassicas
How to Grow
Kale
Cabbage
Broccoli
Sprouts

29 thoughts on “VIDEO: How to Grow Kale and Other Brassicas from Seed – Easy Guide

  1. Hi Huw,
    I think my favourite growing experience has to be potatoes. You never quite know what you are going to get until you harvest them – and I need the exercise too!
    Good luck all who enter and Merry Christmas!!
    Steve

  2. Thank You ! Great video. Really enjoyed seeing the"total" picture,  including the replanting process. Is it okay to eat kale raw ?  I don't mean in  juicing but in say Tacos etc. (have heard rumors 🙂 that it is only to be cooked – thought it would be nice to hear it from someone who grows and eats it. Thank you for these You Tube videos, I am not on the other social medias 🙂

  3. All my brassicas I sown in the greenhouse frazzled away in the heat even with the doors and windows open they are tiny and just growing new leaves but would I be ok sowing sprouting broccoli and things like that now the way you did it or am I to late?

  4. Hi Huw, I really enjoy your videos, I love to learn and you seem to be a very good teacher in the garden. I planted cabbage, kale, broccoli and cauliflower for the first time this year and didn't know about the white butterfly that lays the eggs on them that turn into worms, they devoured my plants and were hard to remove from the wrinkly kale leaves, what do you recommend for me to do for next year's garden to be more successful? I used neem oil, Epsom salts wet and dry and a soap veg oil and mint mixture ( the last one seemed to work the best but much damage was already done). Thanks so much for your help, blessings to you from Fowler OH usa, Angela Karing

  5. Commenting on old video, I wonder if you ever check back on these 😀 Looks like you are transplanting them quite close to each other. How tightly can they be planted? I have very limited space, and I would like to make most of it! I have planted kale approximately maybe three plants into a square meter, could I plant more? The bed is extremely deep with at least 80 cm of good soil, and decent indirect sunlight on it too (not too intense as we are here in Finland, but long hours as the sun does not really set at all during summer). Could I go up to maybe 5 plants or even more? Thank you for your lovely videos, I've been watching thru these and it was very cute to see you as a young boy on your first videos! (tomato tips was the one I saw first)

  6. I raise my brassica seed in seed boxes in a polytunnel (but it has mesh end walls) as my climate isnt really hospitable to exposed seed. Then i prick them out , pot them up for a month and then plant them out. I plant one crop in early spring for summer eating and another sown late summer for winter harvest

  7. Hi Huw, do you use any kind of heat mat to germinate seeds in trays? I struggle to get nice healthy plant starts, they tend to the flimsy delicate side. I need to improve my technique for next season.

  8. Apologies in advance if you've already answer this (and feel free to ignore) but I wondered what you do to protect the brassicas from caterpillars and aphids? Thinking of making a hoop system over the beds, but I've done this before and the little blighters still got in! Don't like to use chemicals. Up my allotment white cabbage butterfly is rampant as well as woolly aphids. Thanks.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *