You have a small patio, a few square feet of deck, or maybe just a sunny apartment balcony — and you want to grow kale without tearing up the backyard. Container growing is the answer, and kale happens to be one of the easiest vegetables to grow in pots in Pennsylvania. The root system is shallow and compact, the plants tolerate the temperature swings that containers experience, and a single pot can produce fresh greens for months with almost no maintenance beyond watering and feeding.
Growing kale in containers in PA comes with some real advantages over in-ground growing. You control the soil quality completely — no fighting with our state’s heavy clay. You can move pots to chase the sun in spring and dodge the shade in fall. And when a hard freeze threatens your November harvest, you can slide the whole pot against a south-facing wall or into a garage for the night. That kind of flexibility is not possible with garden beds.
Below you will find the container-specific details for growing kale in Pennsylvania: which pots work best, the right soil mix, how to plant and space for maximum yield, watering and feeding schedules tuned to PA’s seasons, pest management for container plants, and how to keep pots producing from spring through winter. If you are new to growing kale in general, start with our kale growing hub for the full overview.
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Container Soil Mix for PA Kale
Planting and Spacing in Containers
Sunlight and Placement
Watering Container Kale
Fertilizing Schedule
Best Varieties for Container Growing
Succession Planting in Pots
Pest Management for Container Kale
Overwintering Container Kale in PA
Troubleshooting Common Container Problems
Frequently Asked Questions
Container Kale Calendar — Pennsylvania (Zones 5a-7a)
Pot Up / Transplant
Active Growth
Harvest
Fall Transplant
Dormant / Plan
Container Kale Quick Reference — Pennsylvania
Choosing the Right Container
Container size is the single biggest factor in how well your kale grows. Too small and the roots run out of space, the soil dries out in hours, and the plant produces tiny, bitter leaves. Too large and you waste soil mix and deck space. The sweet spot for kale is a pot that is at least 12 inches wide and 12 inches deep — equivalent to a standard 5-gallon nursery container. That size comfortably holds one kale plant and enough soil to buffer against Pennsylvania’s temperature swings.
For growing two kale plants per pot (which is more efficient on deck space), step up to a 16 to 18 inch wide container in the 10-gallon range. This gives each plant enough root space without competition, and the larger soil volume holds moisture longer on hot summer days.
Container Material Comparison
| Material | Pros | Cons | Best For | PA-Specific Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Plastic nursery pots | Lightweight; cheap; retain moisture well; widely available | Can overheat in summer sun; less attractive; degrade in UV over 2-3 years | Budget growers; shaded patios | Dark colors absorb heat — use light-colored pots or wrap with burlap in summer |
| Fabric grow bags | Excellent drainage; air-prune roots; fold flat for storage; breathable | Dry out faster than plastic; can tip in wind; soil stains fabric | Experienced growers; sunny decks | Best option for PA because drainage prevents waterlogging in our wet springs |
| Glazed ceramic | Attractive; heavy (wind-stable); insulates roots from temperature swings | Expensive; heavy to move; can crack in hard freezes if left out | Front porches; decorative settings | Bring inside or wrap with insulation before hard freeze to prevent cracking |
| Terra cotta | Classic look; porous (good airflow); affordable | Dries out very fast; heavy; cracks in freeze-thaw cycles; fragile | Spring/fall only in PA | Not recommended for winter — freeze-thaw will crack within 1-2 seasons |
| Window boxes / planter troughs | Space-efficient; good for railing mounting; shallow profile works for kale | Limited soil volume; dry out fast; fewer plants per box | Balconies; railings; small spaces | Must be at least 8 inches deep for kale; 10-12 inches preferred |
| Self-watering planters | Built-in reservoir reduces watering frequency; consistent moisture | More expensive; reservoir can breed mosquitoes; heavier | Busy gardeners; hot sunny locations | Excellent for PA summers when daily watering is needed |
Drainage Is Non-Negotiable: Every container must have drainage holes in the bottom. Kale roots sitting in standing water for even a few hours develop root rot, especially during PA’s rainy spring weeks. If your decorative pot lacks holes, drill 4 to 6 holes in the bottom using a 1/2-inch drill bit, or use the nursery pot inside the decorative one as a cachepot and lift it out to drain after heavy rain.
Container Soil Mix for PA Kale
Never use garden soil in containers. Pennsylvania’s clay-based native soil compacts into a brick inside a pot, chokes roots, and drains terribly. Instead, use a quality bagged potting mix as your base and amend it for kale’s specific needs. The goal is a mix that holds moisture without staying soggy, drains freely, and has enough fertility to support continuous leaf production.
Recommended Container Soil Recipe
| Ingredient | Proportion | Purpose | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Quality potting mix (peat or coir based) | 70% | Base structure; moisture retention; drainage | Avoid mixes labeled “moisture control” — they hold too much water for kale |
| Finished compost | 20% | Adds fertility and beneficial microbes; improves water-holding capacity | Use bagged compost or well-aged homemade; not fresh manure |
| Perlite (coarse grade) | 10% | Improves drainage and aeration; prevents compaction over time | Essential if your potting mix feels dense or heavy |
Mix the ingredients in a wheelbarrow or large tub before filling pots. Moisten the mix until it feels like a wrung-out sponge — dry potting mix is hydrophobic and will shed water instead of absorbing it when you first plant. Add 1 tablespoon of slow-release granular fertilizer (like Osmocote 14-14-14) per gallon of pot volume at mixing time. This provides baseline nutrition for the first 4 to 6 weeks.
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Refreshing Soil Between Plantings
You do not need to replace all the soil between spring and fall plantings. Remove the old kale plant, break up the top 4 inches of soil, and mix in a 1 to 2 inch layer of fresh compost plus another dose of slow-release fertilizer. This refreshes the nutrients and organic matter without the expense and waste of starting from scratch. Replace the entire soil mix once per year — typically in early spring before your first planting — since potting mix breaks down and loses structure over a full season of use.
Shallow Planter Box Set with Drainage
These window-box-style planters are 17 inches long with built-in drainage holes — ideal for growing 2 kale plants per box on a deck railing, patio table, or porch step. The shallow profile works perfectly for kale’s compact root system, and the set gives you enough boxes for a multi-pot succession rotation.
Planting and Spacing in Containers
How many kale plants you can fit per container depends entirely on pot size. Crowding leads to competition for water and nutrients, leggy growth as plants stretch for light, and increased disease pressure from poor air circulation. The spacing guide below gives you the maximum number of plants per container size while still producing healthy, full-sized kale.
| Container Size | Diameter / Width | Plants Per Pot | Spacing Between Plants | Expected Yield Per Season |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 5-gallon pot | 12 inches | 1 | Center of pot | 1.5-2 lbs of leaves |
| 7-gallon pot | 14 inches | 1-2 | 6-8 inches apart | 2-3 lbs of leaves |
| 10-gallon pot / half barrel | 16-18 inches | 2-3 | 8-10 inches apart | 3-5 lbs of leaves |
| Window box (24 inches long, 10+ deep) | 24 x 10 inches | 2 | 10-12 inches apart | 2-3 lbs of leaves |
| Large planter / raised bed on legs | 24+ inches | 3-4 | 10-12 inches apart | 4-6 lbs of leaves |
Planting Steps
1. Fill the container with pre-moistened soil mix to within 1 inch of the rim. Leave that inch of space to prevent water from overflowing during watering — a full-to-the-brim pot makes a mess on the deck every time you water.
2. Dig a planting hole slightly larger than the root ball of your seedling. If direct sowing, press seeds 1/4 inch deep and space 2 inches apart (thin to final spacing once seedlings have 3 true leaves).
3. Set the transplant at the same depth it grew in its nursery cell. Firm the soil around the base and water deeply until water runs from the drainage holes. This confirms that the entire soil column is saturated and the roots have good contact.
4. Mulch the soil surface with a 1-inch layer of straw, shredded leaves, or bark chips. Mulch in containers is even more important than in-ground because it dramatically reduces evaporation from the exposed soil surface — a major factor in how quickly containers dry out during PA summers.
Free PA Planting Calendar
Zone-specific · 4 pages · Instant download
Get the exact dates for your Pennsylvania zone — when to start seeds indoors, direct sow, transplant, and harvest. Built around your local frost window, not a generic national average.
- Wall chart with all key dates
- Seed-start schedule (50+ crops)
- First & last frost reference
- Soil temp cheat sheet
Sunlight and Placement
Position your kale containers where they receive at least 6 hours of direct sunlight per day. South-facing and west-facing locations are typically best in Pennsylvania because they capture the most light hours. East-facing spots that get strong morning sun and some afternoon shade also work well, particularly during the summer months.
Seasonal Placement Strategy
One of the biggest advantages of container growing is mobility. Use it. In Pennsylvania, the ideal light and temperature conditions shift with the seasons, and moving your pots 10 to 15 feet can make a meaningful difference in plant performance.
| Season | Best Placement | Why | Move When |
|---|---|---|---|
| Spring (Mar-May) | Full sun, south-facing; against a wall for reflected warmth | Maximize warmth for early growth; wall radiates stored heat at night | Move out from wall once overnight temps stay above 40 F consistently |
| Summer (Jun-Aug) | Morning sun, afternoon shade (east side of house or under tree canopy edge) | Prevents heat stress that makes kale bitter; containers overheat faster than ground soil | Move back to full sun once daytime highs drop below 80 F in September |
| Fall (Sep-Nov) | Full sun, south-facing; open area for maximum light hours | Declining day length means every hour of sun counts; cool temps prevent overheating | Move against south wall when hard freeze (below 25 F) is forecast |
| Winter (Dec-Feb) | Against south-facing wall; under eave or overhang for rain/snow protection | Wall absorbs daytime heat and releases at night; overhang reduces ice damage to leaves | Bring into unheated garage or shed when temps drop below 10 F for extended periods |
Container Heat Buildup: Dark-colored pots sitting on concrete or asphalt in direct summer sun can reach soil temperatures above 100 F — hot enough to cook roots and kill the plant. In July and August, place pots on wooden boards, pot feet, or a layer of gravel rather than directly on hot surfaces. Light-colored pots or fabric grow bags stay cooler.
Watering Container Kale
Container kale needs more frequent watering than in-ground plants because the limited soil volume dries out faster and container walls expose soil to air on all sides. In the peak of a PA summer, a 5-gallon pot in full sun can dry completely in a single day. Consistent moisture is critical for tender, mild-flavored leaves — drought stress makes kale tough and bitter within days.
Watering Schedule by Season
| Season | Check Frequency | Typical Watering | Amount | PA-Specific Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Spring (Mar-May) | Every other day | Every 2-3 days | Until water runs from drainage holes | April rain may handle most watering; check before adding more |
| Summer (Jun-Aug) | Daily (morning) | Daily, sometimes twice in heat waves | Saturate entire soil column each time | Mulch surface; move to shade if wilting by noon despite morning water |
| Fall (Sep-Nov) | Every 2-3 days | Every 3-4 days | Until water runs from drainage | Reduce as temps drop; less evaporation means less water needed |
| Winter (Dec-Feb) | Weekly | Every 5-7 days (on above-freezing days) | Moderate — just enough to keep soil from going bone dry | Frozen soil cannot absorb water; wait for thaw days |
The most reliable way to check whether your container needs water is the finger test: push your index finger 2 inches into the soil. If it feels dry at that depth, water thoroughly. If it still feels damp, wait a day. This simple check prevents both overwatering (which causes root rot) and underwatering (which causes bitter leaves). Consistent even moisture is the key to growing quality leafy greens in any container setup.
Fertilizing Schedule for Container Kale
Container kale needs more frequent fertilizing than in-ground kale because every time you water, nutrients leach out through the drainage holes. The limited soil volume also cannot hold a large reserve of nutrients the way a garden bed can. Plan to feed container kale every 2 weeks during active growth — roughly twice as often as you would feed in-ground plants.
Container Feeding Schedule
| Timing | What to Apply | Rate | Method |
|---|---|---|---|
| At planting | Slow-release granular (14-14-14) | 1 tbsp per gallon of pot volume | Mix into top 2 inches of soil |
| Week 3 after planting | Liquid fish emulsion or balanced 10-10-10 | Half strength per label directions | Water into soil; avoid foliage |
| Every 2 weeks thereafter | Liquid fertilizer (fish emulsion, seaweed, or balanced synthetic) | Full strength per label | Replace one regular watering with fertilizer solution |
| After each heavy harvest | Extra nitrogen boost (blood meal or fish emulsion) | 1/2 tsp blood meal per pot OR extra liquid feed | Side-dress or water in; promotes replacement leaf growth |
| After first frost (fall crop) | Stop fertilizing | None | Excess nitrogen reduces cold hardiness |
Signs of Nutrient Deficiency: If lower leaves turn pale yellow while upper leaves stay green, the plant needs nitrogen. If leaf edges turn brown and crispy, the plant needs potassium. Both are common in container kale because frequent watering flushes nutrients out faster than garden soil does. Increase feeding frequency to weekly if you see these symptoms.
Best Kale Varieties for Container Growing
Not all kale varieties work well in containers. The best container kale has a compact, upright growth habit that does not flop over the sides of the pot, strong root systems that tolerate confined spaces, and good production from a single plant. Avoid full-sized varieties like standard Winterbor that can grow 3 feet wide — they overwhelm a 12-inch pot within weeks.
| Variety | Habit | Height | Min Pot Size | Days to Harvest | Why It Works in Containers |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Prizm | Compact upright | 12-16 inches | 5-gallon | 55 days | Bred specifically for containers and small spaces; semi-curly leaves stay tidy |
| Vates Dwarf Blue Curled | Compact spreading | 12-15 inches | 5-gallon | 55 days | Classic dwarf variety; strong producer; handles PA cold well |
| Red Russian | Semi-compact flat | 18-24 inches | 7-gallon | 50 days | Fastest to harvest; excellent for baby kale; tender flat leaves |
| Scarlet | Compact upright | 14-18 inches | 5-gallon | 58 days | Stunning purple-red leaves; dual-purpose ornamental and edible |
| Lacinato (Dinosaur) | Upright narrow | 24-30 inches | 7-gallon | 62 days | Narrow footprint despite height; best flavor for raw eating |
For the smallest spaces (balcony railings, window boxes), Prizm and Vates Dwarf are the top choices. Both stay under 16 inches tall and produce well from a 5-gallon pot. For slightly larger containers on a patio or deck, Red Russian and Lacinato add variety in leaf type and culinary use. Kale adapts well to container culture because the root system stays relatively shallow compared to other brassicas, making it one of the most forgiving vegetables to grow in a limited soil volume. For complete details on all PA kale varieties including cold hardiness ratings and flavor profiles, see our kale hub guide.
Succession Planting in Pots
Succession planting in containers works a bit differently than in the ground because you are rotating individual pots through the growing cycle rather than rows in a bed. The simplest container succession uses three pots cycling through three stages: one pot producing (harvest phase), one pot growing (establishment phase), and one pot just planted (seedling phase).
Three-Pot Rotation for Continuous Container Kale
| Month | Pot A | Pot B | Pot C |
|---|---|---|---|
| March-April | Plant spring kale | Empty (waiting) | Empty (waiting) |
| May-June | Harvest spring kale | Empty (waiting) | Empty (waiting) |
| July | Pull spring kale; refresh soil | Start fall kale seeds | Empty (waiting) |
| August | Plant fall kale (Sowing 2) | Transplant fall kale (Sowing 1) | Start late-fall seeds |
| September | Grow (establishment) | Begin fall harvest | Transplant late-fall kale |
| October-November | Fall harvest begins | Continue harvest; frost sweeten | Grow / establish |
| December-February | Winter harvest under cover | Winter harvest under cover | Winter harvest under cover |
This three-pot system keeps fresh kale available from May through February without needing more than three containers and six square feet of deck space. Adjust the timing for your zone — northern PA gardeners should start all sowings 2 weeks earlier than shown, while Philadelphia-area growers can push dates 2 weeks later.
Pest Management for Container Kale
Container-grown kale faces the same pests as in-ground kale — imported cabbageworms, aphids, and flea beetles — but the smaller scale makes management easier. You are dealing with a handful of plants instead of a full garden row, so hand-picking and physical barriers are even more effective.
Container-Specific Pest Controls
| Pest | Container-Specific Control | Why It Works Better in Pots |
|---|---|---|
| Cabbageworms | Lightweight row cover draped over a tomato cage or wire hoop inserted in the pot | Easy to cover 1-3 pots completely; no edge to anchor like a garden row |
| Aphids | Blast with spray bottle or hose nozzle; wipe undersides of leaves by hand | Few enough plants to inspect individually every few days |
| Flea beetles | Row cover at transplant time; move pots away from garden beds where beetles overwinter | Containers elevated on a deck are farther from soil-dwelling beetle populations |
| Slugs | Copper tape around pot rim; elevate pots on feet or a stand | Slugs must climb the pot wall — copper tape creates a barrier they avoid crossing |
| Fungus gnats | Let top inch of soil dry between waterings; add 1/2 inch of sand on soil surface | Common in overwatered containers; easier to control moisture in a single pot |
The simplest and most effective pest prevention for container kale is a small wire hoop with row cover fabric. Bend a 3-foot piece of heavy-gauge wire into a U-shape, push the ends into the soil on opposite sides of the pot, and drape a piece of row cover over the top. Secure the cover around the pot rim with a large rubber band or bungee cord. This creates a mini greenhouse that blocks all flying pests while allowing light, air, and water through. For full pest identification and treatment details, see our kale pests and diseases guide.
Overwintering Container Kale in PA
Overwintering kale in containers is harder than in the ground because container soil freezes faster and deeper. In-ground kale has the mass of the surrounding earth to buffer its roots from extreme cold. A pot sitting on a deck has cold air hitting it from all sides, and the soil can freeze solid in a single overnight cold snap. That said, with the right protection, container kale can survive a PA winter even in zone 5b.
Winter Protection Strategy by Zone
| PA Region (Zone) | Protection Level Needed | Specific Steps | Expected Harvest Window |
|---|---|---|---|
| Eastern PA (7a) | Moderate | Move against south wall; wrap pot with burlap or bubble wrap; row cover over top on nights below 20 F | Through January; regrowth in March |
| Western PA (6a-6b) | Moderate-high | South wall + pot wrap + row cover; move into unheated garage during extreme cold (below 10 F) | Through December; sporadic January harvest |
| Central PA (5b-6a) | High | Unheated garage or cold basement for coldest weeks; south wall with full wrap + row cover otherwise | Through November outdoors; occasional winter harvest from garage |
| Northern PA (5a-5b) | Very high | Move to unheated garage or enclose in cold frame on porch; outdoor survival unlikely without significant protection | Through late October outdoors; garage harvest through December |
The Garage Trick: An unheated attached garage typically stays between 25 and 45 degrees through a PA winter — cold enough to keep kale dormant but warm enough to prevent root death. Move container kale into the garage before hard freeze events and back out to a south-facing wall on milder days. Plants need some light, so place them near a window or give them a few hours of outdoor sun on days above 35 F.
Troubleshooting Common Container Problems
Container kale runs into a few problems that in-ground growers rarely face. Most are related to the limited soil volume and the faster temperature swings that containers experience. Here are the issues you are most likely to encounter and how to fix them.
| Problem | Likely Cause | Fix | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Leaves turning bitter | Heat stress; inconsistent watering; underfertilizing | Move to afternoon shade; water consistently; feed every 2 weeks | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Yellowing lower leaves | Nitrogen deficiency (nutrients washed out by watering) | Feed with fish emulsion or blood meal immediately; increase feeding frequency | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Wilting despite wet soil | Root rot from overwatering or poor drainage | Check drainage holes; let soil dry slightly between waterings; repot if roots are brown/mushy | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Leggy, stretched plants | Insufficient light; too warm indoors | Move to brighter location; 6+ hours direct sun minimum; keep cool (55-65 F ideal) | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Soil pulling away from pot edges | Potting mix has dried out and shrunk; water runs down sides without absorbing | Set pot in a tray of water for 30 minutes to rehydrate from the bottom; add mulch layer | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| White crust on soil surface | Mineral buildup from fertilizer salts or hard water | Scrape off crust; flush pot with plain water until it runs freely from drainage for 2-3 minutes | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Plant toppling over in wind | Top-heavy plant in lightweight pot; exposed location | Use heavier pot (ceramic); add a stake; place against a wall or in a sheltered corner | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Tiny flying insects around soil | Western PA
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The Garage Trick: An unheated attached garage typically stays between 25 and 45 degrees through a PA winter — cold enough to keep kale dormant but warm enough to prevent root death. Move container kale into the garage before hard freeze events and back out to a south-facing wall on milder days. Plants need some light, so place them near a window or give them a few hours of outdoor sun on days above 35 F. Troubleshooting Common Container ProblemsContainer kale runs into a few problems that in-ground growers rarely face. Most are related to the limited soil volume and the faster temperature swings that containers experience. Here are the issues you are most likely to encounter and how to fix them.
Most container kale problems in Pennsylvania come down to two root causes: inconsistent watering and insufficient feeding. If you get those two things right — checking soil moisture daily and feeding every 2 weeks — the rest takes care of itself. For a full guide to kale care techniques including soil prep and harvesting, see our how to grow kale in PA guide. If you have garden space and want to compare container growing to bed growing, check out our raised bed kale guide. More in this guide: Plan your full season: See our monthly planting guide for a month-by-month schedule, or browse all crops in our Pennsylvania vegetables hub. For frost timing, check our PA frost dates by region. Frequently Asked Questions About Growing Kale in Containers in Pennsylvania1. What size pot do I need to grow kale? A 5-gallon pot (12 inches wide, 12 inches deep) is the minimum for one kale plant. For two plants per pot, use a 10-gallon container (16-18 inches wide). Larger pots hold more soil, which means more consistent moisture and less frequent watering — a significant advantage during PA summers when containers dry out fast. 2. Can I use garden soil in my kale containers? No. Garden soil — especially Pennsylvania’s clay-based soil — compacts in containers, drains poorly, and can introduce disease organisms. Use a quality bagged potting mix amended with 20% compost and 10% perlite. This provides the drainage, aeration, and moisture retention that container-grown kale needs. 3. How often do I water container kale in Pennsylvania? In summer, check daily and water most days — sometimes twice during heat waves. In spring and fall, every 2 to 3 days is typical. In winter, once a week on above-freezing days. Use the finger test: push your finger 2 inches into the soil. If it feels dry at that depth, water thoroughly until it runs from the drainage holes. 4. Can container kale survive a Pennsylvania winter outdoors? With protection, yes — in zones 6a through 7a. Move the pot against a south-facing wall, wrap the container with burlap or bubble wrap to insulate the roots, and drape row cover over the top on nights below 20 F. In zones 5a-5b, move pots into an unheated garage or cold frame during the coldest weeks. Container soil freezes faster than ground soil, so winter protection is more critical for pots. 5. Why is my container kale bitter? Bitter container kale is almost always caused by heat stress or inconsistent watering. Containers on a sunny deck can reach soil temperatures over 100 F in July, which stresses roots and makes leaves tough and bitter. Move pots to afternoon shade during heat waves, water consistently, and harvest in the morning. Fall container kale that has been through a few frosts will taste dramatically sweeter than summer-grown kale. 6. How many kale plants can I grow in a window box? A standard 24-inch window box that is at least 10 inches deep comfortably holds 2 kale plants spaced 10 to 12 inches apart. Choose compact varieties like Prizm or Vates Dwarf Blue Curled for the best results in window boxes. You can also grow a dense planting of baby kale in a window box by sowing seeds 2 inches apart and harvesting entire plants at 3 to 4 inches tall. Continue Reading: Kale Growing Guides for Pennsylvania
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