Vegetable

Broccoli

Brassica oleracea var. italica · Brassicaceae

Also called: Calabrese, Sprouting Broccoli

Broccoli (Brassica oleracea var. italica) is a moderate-water vegetable well suited to Tucson and the low desert. It grows to 18-30 in tall and 18-24 in wide in full sun, with a moderate growth rate.

Broccoli (Brassica oleracea var. italica) growing in Tucson
Photo: MPF (CC BY 2.5) · Wikimedia Commons

Broccoli at a glance

Water use
Moderate (established)
Sun
Full sun (6+ hours) during the cool season.
Mature size
18-30 in. tall and 18-24 in. wide
Growth rate
Moderate
Bloom
Yellow (the edible 'head' is unopened flower buds; let it flower only to save seed), Heads harvested late fall through winter/early spring; bolts to yellow bloom with heat
Cold hardiness
Cool-season; frost-tolerant and even sweetened by light frost, hardy to roughly 25-28 F. Mature plants tolerate Tucson winter cold; sustained spring heat causes bolting.
Soil
Fertile, well-drained soil rich in organic matter; pH 6.0-7.0. Amend Tucson's alkaline soil generously with compost.
Native range
Cultivated derivative of wild cabbage native to coastal Mediterranean / southern and western Europe
Best used as
Edible flower heads and side shoots, Nutrient-dense cool-season vegetable, Fall/winter garden crop
Wildlife
Cabbage loopers, aphids, and harlequin bugs are common Tucson pests; flowers attract pollinators if allowed to bloom.
Toxicity
Edible and non-toxic to people. Generally safe for pets, though large amounts of raw brassica can cause gas/GI upset in dogs.

How to grow Broccoli in Tucson & the low desert

Watering

Water deeply and consistently, about 1-1.5 in. per week (more in dry/windy spells); even moisture prevents premature buttoning and bitter heads. In Tucson, set out transplants Sept-Oct (or sow seed late summer); it needs the cool fall/winter window to head up before spring heat.

Fertilizer & nutrients

Heavy feeder: incorporate compost plus a balanced fertilizer at planting and side-dress with nitrogen at 3-4 weeks and again as heads form. Boron and adequate nitrogen are important for good head development.

Pruning & care

Cut the central head while buds are tight and before yellow flowers open; leave the plant to produce smaller edible side shoots for weeks afterward.

Notes

Best planted as transplants in Sept-Oct for a fall-to-winter Tucson harvest; a second short window exists in late winter but spring heat limits it. Watch for buttoning (tiny premature heads) caused by transplant stress or heat. Cabbage-family pests are the main challenge — scout undersides of leaves.

Sources: University of Arizona Cooperative Extension – Pima County Monthly Gardening Guides; Tucson Organic Gardeners Planting Guide; Pima County Master Gardeners

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