Kale has earned its reputation as one of the most rewarding vegetables to grow in a British garden. This hardy leafy green produces generous harvests through autumn and winter when few other vegetables are ready to pick, making it an indispensable crop for the kitchen garden.
Why Grow Kale?
There are excellent reasons to dedicate space to kale. The plant is exceptionally cold-hardy — exposure to frost actually improves its flavour, making leaves sweeter and more tender. A single plant can produce for months, supplying fresh leaves throughout winter when homegrown vegetables are scarce. Kale is also packed with nutrients, providing generous amounts of vitamins A, C, and K, along with folate and iron.
Choosing the Right Variety
Selecting an appropriate variety for your conditions matters. Pentland Brig is a reliable British-bred variety that copes well with harsh winters. Nero di Toscana, also called dinosaur kale, features dark blue-green leaves with an excellent flavour. Red Russian develops attractive purple stems and handles cold particularly well. For compact spaces, Dwarf Green Curled stays manageable at around 60cm tall.
Soil Preparation
Kale performs best in well-drained, fertile soil with a pH between 6.0 and 7.5. Work in generous quantities of well-rotted compost or manure before planting, aiming to enrich the top 30cm of soil. If your soil tends toward acidity, apply lime in autumn to bring pH into the optimal range — this also helps protect against clubroot, a soil-borne disease that affects brassicas.
Avoid planting kale in ground that previously hosted other brassicas (cabbage, broccoli, Brussels sprouts) for at least three years, as pest and disease build-up can become problematic.
Sowing and Planting
Sow kale from April through July for harvesting from June through December. In milder regions, you can start plants under cover from March for earlier harvests. Sow seeds 1cm deep in modular trays or directly in prepared beds. When seedlings have five or six true leaves, transplant them to their final positions, spacing plants 45-60cm apart depending on variety.
For an extended harvest into the following spring, sow Nero di Toscana or other autumn varieties in August or September. These overwintering types establish roots before winter arrives and burst into rapid growth when temperatures rise in March.
Caring for Your Plants
Keep soil consistently moist, especially during the first few weeks after transplanting when plants are establishing. Water thoroughly during dry spells — irregular watering can cause leaves to become tough and bitter. Apply a thick mulch around plants once established to conserve moisture and suppress weed competition.
Netting is essential in most areas. Pigeons find young kale irresistible and can strip plants in days. Equally important is protection against cabbage white butterfly, whose caterpillars can devastate a crop. Secure netting firmly around supports, ensuring no gaps allow butterflies to reach the foliage.
Tall varieties may need staking, particularly in exposed gardens. A single sturdy stake per plant provides sufficient support.
Harvesting
Begin harvesting when leaves reach a usable size, typically around 30 days after transplanting. Pick from the bottom up, taking outer leaves first and leaving the central growing point intact. This cut-and-come-again approach encourages continued production from the same plants over many weeks.
Regular harvesting stimulates fresh growth, so check plants every few days during peak season. After a frost, leaves become noticeably sweeter — time your main harvest accordingly for the best flavour.
Common Problems
Cabbage white butterfly remains the most persistent pest. Inspect plants regularly and remove caterpillars by hand if netting fails. Aphids can colonise leaf undersides, particularly in autumn — a strong water jet often displaces them effectively.
Clubroot causes swollen, distorted roots and stunted growth. Improve drainage on heavy soils and maintain adequate lime levels to suppress this disease. Cabbage root fly occasionally attacks base roots; cabbage collars placed around stems provide effective prevention.
Conclusion
Kale is a forgiving, productive crop that rewards even modest care with abundant harvests through autumn and winter. Given well-drained soil, adequate spacing, and protection from pests, a handful of plants will supply fresh leaves for months on end.

