Vegetable

Curly Kale

Brassica oleracea var. sabellica · Brassicaceae

Also called: Scotch kale, Borecole, Curly-leaf kale

Curly Kale (Brassica oleracea var. sabellica) is a moderate-water vegetable well suited to Tucson and the low desert. It's a moderate-growing vegetable.

Curly Kale (Brassica oleracea var. sabellica) growing in Tucson
Photo: MPF (CC BY 2.5) · Wikimedia Commons

Curly Kale at a glance

Water use
Moderate (established)
Sun
Full sun in the cool season; tolerates partial shade. Late plantings benefit from afternoon shade as spring warms.
Mature size
1-2 ft tall and 1-2 ft wide.
Growth rate
Moderate
Bloom
Yellow (4-petaled flowers if it bolts in spring; not the goal), Bolts/flowers in spring with heat - harvest leaves through the cool season before then.
Cold hardiness
Very cold-hardy cool-season biennial grown as an annual; tolerates Tucson frosts and light freezes well, and flavor often sweetens after frost. Declines and bolts once spring/summer heat arrives.
Soil
Fertile, well-drained soil rich in organic matter; pH 6.0-7.5.
Native range
Mediterranean / Western Europe (cultivated form of wild cabbage, Brassica oleracea)
Best used as
Nutritious cool-season leafy green (salads, sauteed, chips, smoothies), Long-harvest fall-through-spring crop, Ornamental edible (textured foliage), Raised-bed and large-container vegetable
Wildlife
Watch for cabbage loopers/aphids; flowers (if bolted) attract pollinators.
Toxicity
Non-toxic and edible for people. Note: like other brassicas, large quantities of raw kale can cause digestive upset or thyroid effects in pets (dogs/cats) - generally fine in small amounts but feed sparingly.

How to grow Curly Kale in Tucson & the low desert

Watering

Cool-season crop: set transplants or sow seed from September through January/February in Tucson; it grows through fall, winter, and into spring. Keep soil evenly moist with regular deep watering - even moisture keeps leaves tender and reduces bitterness and pest stress. Mulch to conserve moisture and moderate soil temperature.

Fertilizer & nutrients

Moderate-to-heavy nitrogen feeder. Amend with compost and side-dress with a nitrogen-rich fertilizer (or fish emulsion/blood meal) every 3-4 weeks for vigorous leafy growth.

Pruning & care

Harvest by picking lower/outer leaves first, letting the plant keep producing from the center ('cut-and-come-again'). Remove yellowed or pest-damaged leaves. No formal pruning needed.

Notes

One of the most productive and forgiving cool-season greens for Tucson - plant in fall for a long fall-through-spring harvest. Frost actually improves sweetness. Watch for aphids and cabbage worms; floating row cover helps. Not a summer crop.

Sources: University of Arizona Cooperative Extension / Pima County Master Gardeners cool-season vegetable calendar; Tucson Organic Gardeners Planting Guide; Green Things Nursery (Tucson) planting guide

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