Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. hands holding kale leaf with plant care 101 graphic overlay Is kale good for you? The answer is a resounding yes! Kale often is ...
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. A couple planting greens in their garden. - Momo Productions/Getty Images If you're the type of gardener who loves plants that ...
Here's how to care for this nutritious vegetable at home. Some people love kale and some people don't, but everyone agrees on one point—it's unquestionably a superfood. This nutrient-packed member of ...
Kale is the ultimate superfood everyone needs in their vegetable gardens. High in fiber, folate, antioxidants and essential vitamins A, C and K, kale boasts a ton of immune-boosting and ...
CLEVELAND, Ohio -- Even though the temperatures are still fluctuating wildly and we are six to eight weeks away from our last frost, several types of vegetables can be sown outside now in time for ...
Kale is frost-hardy and tastes sweeter after cold weather. Plant six to eight weeks before your first frost date. Baby kale is ready for harvest just 20–30 days after sowing. Kale, Brassica oleracea ...
Dear Roger: I’m a kale freak. I can’t grow them in my apartment. Will they grow in pots on my balcony? — Patricia Harrison, Wilmington Dear Patricia: You absolutely can grow fine kale in a pot. Kale ...
August is a good time to plant kale for a fall harvest. The sun is setting earlier and school supplies lurk around every corner: sure signs that summer fun is drawing to a close. But not for gardeners ...
After one of the worst snow years on record in the western United States, communities must live with less water.
I don’t know when I began eating kale regularly, but I definitely didn’t grow up eating it. It was most likely while living in Portland, Ore., during the kale-crazed early 2000s. One of my many ...
Most vegetables grow best in full sun—at least six hours of direct sunlight each day—but for gardens with limited exposure, ...
As I wrote in my last article, we winter-weary gardeners are eager to get our vegetables and herbs growing as soon as possible in early spring. Because the last frost date in the Pee Dee region is ...