You are staring at a pack of kale seeds, checking the weather app every few hours, and trying to figure out if it is finally safe to plant. Too early and the seedlings sit in cold mud going nowhere. Too late and you miss the sweet spot before summer heat makes spring kale bitter. The timing question is even trickier if you want a fall crop — start those seeds too late and the first frost catches plants before they reach picking size. In Pennsylvania, getting the dates right is the difference between two full harvests per year and one mediocre one.
The good news is that kale gives you a wider planting window than almost any other vegetable you can grow in PA. Seeds germinate in soil as cool as 45 degrees, transplants handle frost down to 20 degrees without flinching, and fall-planted kale actually improves after your first freeze. The challenge is not whether kale can handle our climate — it is dialing in the exact dates for your specific zone so each planting peaks at the right time.
Below you will find zone-by-zone spring and fall planting calendars for all four PA growing regions, soil temperature germination data, indoor seed-starting schedules, succession planting timelines, and a month-by-month task calendar you can pin to the garden shed wall. Every date is calibrated to Pennsylvania zones 5a through 7a using historical frost data from the past 30 years.
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Fall Planting Window by Zone
Indoor Seed-Starting Schedule
Soil Temperature and Germination
Direct Sowing Timing
Transplant Timing and Hardening Off
Succession Planting Schedule
Variety Selection by Planting Season
Frost Dates and Season Extension
Month-by-Month Task Calendar
Common Timing Mistakes in PA
Frequently Asked Questions
Kale Planting Windows — Pennsylvania (Zones 5a-7a)
Transplant Window
Direct Sow / Growth
Harvest
Fall Transplant
Dormant / Planning
Kale Planting Quick Reference — Pennsylvania
Spring Planting Window by Zone
Spring kale goes into the ground earlier than most people expect. Because kale handles frost down to 20 degrees Fahrenheit without damage, you can transplant hardened-off seedlings 2 to 3 weeks before your last expected frost. This is a significant advantage over warm-season crops like tomatoes and peppers that cannot go out until all frost risk has passed.
The table below shows the spring planting window for each PA region. “Earliest transplant” is the date you can safely set out hardened-off seedlings with minimal frost risk to the plants. “Last practical transplant” is the latest date that still gives kale enough cool weather to produce a good spring harvest before summer heat arrives.
| PA Region (Zone) | Last Spring Frost (Avg) | Earliest Transplant | Last Practical Transplant | Spring Harvest Window |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Eastern PA — Philadelphia (7a) | April 10-15 | March 20 | April 20 | May 15 – June 30 |
| Western PA — Pittsburgh (6a-6b) | April 20-30 | April 1 | May 1 | May 25 – July 5 |
| Central PA — State College (5b-6a) | May 1-10 | April 10 | May 10 | June 1 – July 10 |
| Northern PA — Erie/Poconos (5a-5b) | May 10-20 | April 20 | May 20 | June 10 – July 15 |
Zone 7a gardeners in the Philadelphia suburbs and Delaware Valley have the biggest advantage here: a spring transplant window that opens in late March gives kale nearly three full months of cool-weather growing before summer heat arrives. In the northern tier (zone 5a), the spring window is tighter — roughly 6 to 8 weeks of ideal growing conditions between the last frost and the onset of 80-degree days. For a complete growing guide covering all techniques, see our kale growing hub.
Philly-Area Head Start: Zone 7a gardeners can push spring kale even earlier by using a cold frame or row cover tunnel. Under protection, transplants can go out in early March — a full month before the last frost. The plants establish their root systems during March’s cool weather and are ready to produce heavily by late April.
Fall Planting Window by Zone
The fall planting window is where most PA kale growers should focus their energy. Fall kale produces sweeter leaves, faces fewer pest problems, and can be harvested for three to four months compared to the spring crop’s six to eight weeks. The key to a successful fall planting is counting backward from your first expected frost date.
How to Calculate Your Fall Planting Date
Use this formula: First frost date minus days-to-maturity minus 14 days. The extra 14 days accounts for the slower growth that happens as day length decreases in September and October. For a variety like Winterbor (60 days to maturity) in zone 6a (first frost around October 15), the math works out to: October 15 minus 60 minus 14 = July 22 seed-start date.
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| PA Region (Zone) | First Fall Frost (Avg) | Start Seeds Indoors | Transplant Outdoors | Fall Harvest Begins | Harvest Continues Through |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Eastern PA — Philadelphia (7a) | Oct 25 – Nov 5 | July 10-20 | August 10-20 | Late September | December – January |
| Western PA — Pittsburgh (6a-6b) | Oct 15-25 | July 1-10 | August 5-15 | Mid-September | December (with cover) |
| Central PA — State College (5b-6a) | Oct 5-15 | July 1-10 | August 1-10 | Early September | November – December |
| Northern PA — Erie/Poconos (5a-5b) | Sep 25 – Oct 10 | June 25 – July 5 | July 25 – Aug 5 | Late August | November (with cover) |
Northern PA Deadline: If you garden in zones 5a or 5b, your fall kale seeds must be started by the first week of July at the latest. The early first frost (late September) combined with shorter September days means plants that are not well-established by Labor Day will not reach harvestable size before cold weather shuts them down.
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
Indoor Seed-Starting Schedule
Starting kale seeds indoors gives you the most control over timing. Indoor-started transplants are 4 to 6 weeks ahead of direct-sown seeds, which means earlier spring harvests and better-established fall plants. The schedule below covers both spring and fall indoor starts for all four PA zones.
Spring Indoor Start Dates
| PA Region | Start Seeds Indoors | Seedlings Ready | Begin Hardening Off | Transplant Date |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Eastern PA (7a) | February 10-15 | March 10-15 (4 true leaves) | March 13-17 | March 20-25 |
| Western PA (6a-6b) | February 20-28 | March 25 – April 1 | March 25-30 | April 1-10 |
| Central PA (5b-6a) | March 1-7 | April 1-7 | April 3-8 | April 10-15 |
| Northern PA (5a-5b) | March 10-15 | April 10-15 | April 13-18 | April 20 – May 1 |
Fall Indoor Start Dates
| PA Region | Start Seeds | Seedlings Ready | Transplant Outdoors | First Harvest (Approx) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Eastern PA (7a) | July 10-15 | August 5-10 | August 12-20 | Late September |
| Western PA (6a-6b) | July 1-7 | July 28 – August 3 | August 5-12 | Mid-September |
| Central PA (5b-6a) | July 1-5 | July 25-30 | August 1-8 | Early September |
| Northern PA (5a-5b) | June 25 – July 1 | July 20-25 | July 25 – August 3 | Late August |
For detailed instructions on indoor seed starting technique — light requirements, container selection, temperature management, and feeding — see our step-by-step how to grow kale in PA guide.
Soil Temperature and Germination
Soil temperature is the single most reliable predictor of whether your kale seeds will germinate and how quickly. Air temperature fluctuates wildly in a PA spring — a 70-degree afternoon can follow a 35-degree morning — but soil temperature changes much more slowly and gives a more accurate signal of when conditions are ready for sowing.
Germination Rate by Soil Temperature
| Soil Temp (F) | Days to Germination | Germination Rate | Practical Meaning for PA |
|---|---|---|---|
| 40 | 14-21 days | 40-50% | Too cold for reliable results; wait 1-2 weeks |
| 45 | 10-14 days | 60-70% | Minimum for spring direct sow; expect slow, patchy germination |
| 50 | 7-10 days | 75-85% | Good for early spring; soil reaches this by mid-April in most PA zones |
| 55-60 | 5-7 days | 85-95% | Ideal for spring and fall sowings; fast, even germination |
| 65 | 4-6 days | 90-95% | Optimal; typical late April to May soil temps in PA |
| 75 | 4-5 days | 80-85% | Still good but rate starts declining; June soil temps |
| 80 | 5-7 days | 60-70% | Marginal; common in July surface soil; sow in shade or start indoors |
| 85+ | Poor or none | Below 50% | Too hot; do not direct sow — start fall seeds indoors or in shade |
Check soil temperature by inserting a soil thermometer 2 inches deep at 8 AM for three consecutive mornings. Morning readings give you the daily minimum soil temperature, which is the number that matters for germination. If the average of those three readings is 45 degrees or above, you can direct sow kale. If it is 55 or above, germination will be fast and reliable.
PA Soil Temperature Timeline: In a typical year, PA soil temperatures at 2-inch depth reach 45 F in early to mid-April in zone 7a, mid to late April in zone 6a, and early May in zones 5a-5b. Raised beds warm 1-2 weeks faster than in-ground soil because they drain better and absorb more solar heat.
Direct Sowing Timing
Direct sowing eliminates the indoor setup entirely but requires more precise timing. You need soil that is warm enough for germination (45 degrees minimum) but air temperatures that are still cool enough for kale to thrive. In Pennsylvania, this creates two optimal direct-sowing windows: mid-April through mid-May for spring and mid-August through early September for fall.
Spring Direct Sow Schedule
| PA Region | Earliest Direct Sow | Optimal Direct Sow | Latest Spring Direct Sow |
|---|---|---|---|
| Eastern PA (7a) | Late March (if soil 45 F+) | April 1-15 | April 25 |
| Western PA (6a-6b) | Early April | April 10-25 | May 5 |
| Central PA (5b-6a) | Mid-April | April 20 – May 5 | May 15 |
| Northern PA (5a-5b) | Late April | May 1-15 | May 20 |
Fall Direct Sow Schedule
Fall direct sowing is trickier because you are sowing into warm summer soil that often exceeds 85 degrees at the surface — too hot for reliable kale germination. The workaround is to sow in a shaded outdoor bed or in cell trays placed on a shaded porch, then transplant seedlings to the garden once they have 3 to 4 true leaves.
If you want to direct sow fall kale into the garden, wait until late August or early September when soil temperatures in most of PA drop below 80 degrees. At that point, germination will be reliable, but you lose 3 to 4 weeks compared to starting indoors in July. For zones 5a and 5b, direct sowing fall kale is generally not recommended because the shortened growing season does not leave enough time for plants to reach full size.
Transplant Timing and Hardening Off
Transplanting gives you the most flexibility in timing because you control the environment during the critical first 4 to 6 weeks of growth. Indoor-grown seedlings are ready to transplant when they have 4 to 5 true leaves and stand 3 to 4 inches tall — typically 4 to 6 weeks after sowing.
The 7-Day Hardening-Off Calendar
Hardening off is the process of gradually exposing indoor seedlings to outdoor conditions. Skipping this step is the most common reason spring kale transplants fail — they cannot handle the sudden shift from a 68-degree kitchen to a 45-degree windy April morning. Start hardening off 7 days before your target transplant date.
| Day | Where to Place Seedlings | Hours Outdoors | Conditions |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Covered porch or under large tree | 2 hours | Full shade, sheltered from wind |
| 2 | Same sheltered spot | 3-4 hours | Shade with brief filtered sun |
| 3 | Partly sunny spot | 4-5 hours | Morning sun, afternoon shade |
| 4 | Partly sunny spot | 5-6 hours | Increasing sun exposure; light breeze OK |
| 5 | Garden area (full conditions) | 6-8 hours | Full sun and wind; bring in if below 28 F at night |
| 6 | Garden area | All day | Full exposure; leave out overnight if above 25 F |
| 7 | Planting site | 24 hours | Full outdoor conditions; transplant next morning |
Transplant on a cloudy day or in the late afternoon. Full midday sun on freshly transplanted seedlings causes temporary wilting even when the soil is adequately moist. Water each transplant with at least one pint of water immediately after planting to collapse air pockets around the roots. For the full step-by-step transplanting process, see our how to grow kale guide.
Succession Planting Schedule
Succession planting means starting new kale seeds at regular intervals so you always have plants at different stages of growth. Instead of one big planting that peaks and fades, succession planting gives you a steady supply of fresh kale from April through December. For PA gardeners, three strategic sowings cover the full year.
Three-Sowing Plan for Pennsylvania
| Sowing | When to Start Seeds | When to Transplant | Harvest Window | Purpose |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sowing 1: Spring | Mid-Feb to mid-March (indoors) | Late March to late April | May through early July | Fresh spring greens; harvest aggressively before heat |
| Sowing 2: Main Fall | Early to mid-July (indoors or shade) | Early to mid-August | September through December | Primary crop; frost-sweetened leaves; longest harvest window |
| Sowing 3: Winter | Late July to early August | Late August to early September | October through February (under cover) | Overwinter crop; small harvests on warm days; spring raab bonus |
Running all three sowings provides kale from May through February — roughly 10 months of continuous harvest. The spring crop carries you through early summer. The fall crop covers September through December with the best-tasting leaves. The winter crop, protected with row cover or a cold frame, fills in the gap from January through the first spring transplants.
Baby Kale Succession (Every 2 Weeks)
For tender baby kale that is milder than mature leaves and perfect for salads and smoothies, sow a short row (3 to 4 feet) every 2 weeks from April through September. Space seeds 2 to 3 inches apart and harvest entire plants at 3 to 4 inches tall, about 25 to 30 days from sowing. This rapid cycle means you can fit 12 to 14 baby kale sowings into a single PA growing season from one small bed.
| Baby Kale Sowing # | Sow Date | Harvest Date (Approx) | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | April 1 | May 1 | Start under row cover if frost expected |
| 2 | April 15 | May 15 | Warm soil speeds germination |
| 3 | May 1 | May 30 | Peak spring growing conditions |
| 4 | May 15 | June 12 | Last spring sowing before heat |
| 5 | June 1 | June 28 | Provide afternoon shade in hot areas |
| 6 | June 15 | July 12 | Shade cloth or shaded bed recommended |
| 7 | July 1 | July 28 | Start in trays if soil too hot for direct sow |
| 8 | July 15 | August 12 | Same — start indoors or in shade |
| 9 | August 1 | August 30 | Direct sow works again as soil cools |
| 10 | August 15 | September 14 | Great fall growing conditions |
| 11 | September 1 | October 1 | Frost sweetens even baby leaves |
| 12 | September 15 | October 20 | Last baby kale sowing for most of PA |
Variety Selection by Planting Season
Not all kale varieties perform equally across spring and fall plantings. Some handle heat better for spring growing; others have superior cold tolerance for fall and winter harvests. Choosing the right variety for each season maximizes your yield and eating quality.
| Variety | Days to Maturity | Best Season in PA | Heat Tolerance | Cold Tolerance | Why Choose It |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Red Russian | 50 days | Spring | Good | Very good (15 F) | Fastest to harvest; tender baby greens; mild flavor holds in heat |
| Lacinato (Dinosaur) | 62 days | Spring / Early Fall | Good | Good (20 F) | Thick leaves resist wilting in heat; best raw eating quality |
| Vates Dwarf Blue | 55 days | Spring / Fall | Moderate | Very good (15 F) | Compact habit fits small spaces; reliable all-season performer |
| Winterbor | 60 days | Fall / Winter | Moderate | Excellent (10 F) | Supreme cold hardiness; best frost-sweetening; overwinter champion |
| White Russian | 60 days | Fall / Winter | Poor | Excellent (10 F) | Handles extreme cold; thick white stems; great for overwintering |
| Redbor | 55 days | Fall | Moderate | Good (20 F) | Purple-red color deepens in cold; dual-purpose ornamental/edible |
| Prizm | 55 days | Spring / Fall | Good | Very good (15 F) | Compact upright habit; perfect for containers; semi-curly texture |
Best Two-Variety Strategy: Plant Red Russian in spring (fast to harvest, handles warmth) and Winterbor in fall (maximum frost sweetening, overwinters through zone 6a). These two varieties cover the full PA season with distinct flavors and textures. If you grow in containers, add Prizm as a third variety for its compact size.
Frost Dates and Season Extension
Understanding your local frost dates is critical for timing both spring and fall kale plantings. The dates below are 30-year averages based on USDA weather station data for representative PA locations. Your specific frost dates may vary by a week or more depending on elevation, proximity to water, and urban heat island effects.
PA Frost Date Reference
| Location | Zone | Avg Last Spring Frost | Avg First Fall Frost | Frost-Free Days |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Philadelphia | 7a | April 10 | November 1 | 205 |
| Allentown / Lehigh Valley | 6b | April 18 | October 20 | 185 |
| Pittsburgh | 6a-6b | April 22 | October 18 | 179 |
| Harrisburg | 6b-7a | April 15 | October 22 | 190 |
| State College | 5b-6a | May 5 | October 8 | 156 |
| Erie | 5b-6a | May 8 | October 12 | 157 |
| Scranton / Poconos | 5a-5b | May 12 | October 3 | 144 |
| Bradford / Northern Tier | 5a | May 18 | September 28 | 133 |
Season Extension for Kale
Kale does not stop producing at first frost — it gets better. But eventually, sustained temperatures below 10 to 15 degrees will kill unprotected plants. Simple frost protection extends your harvest window by 4 to 8 weeks beyond the first frost date, pushing kale production into December and even January for much of PA.
Floating Row Cover / Garden Fabric
A lightweight row cover draped over wire hoops adds 4-8 degrees of frost protection — enough to keep kale alive and producing through December in zones 6a-7a. It also blocks cabbage moths all season. One purchase covers multiple seasons of use.
| Protection Level | Added Warmth | Extends Harvest To | Best for Zones |
|---|---|---|---|
| None (bare kale) | 0 | Mid-November (6a-7a); Late October (5a-5b) | All zones for basic fall harvest |
| Straw mulch (6-8 inches at base) | Root protection to 10-15 F | Late November | All zones as base layer |
| Single row cover on hoops | +4-8 F | December (6a-7a); Mid-November (5a-5b) | 6a, 6b, 7a |
| Double row cover | +8-12 F | January (6a-7a); December (5a-5b) | 5b, 6a |
| Low tunnel / cold frame | +12-20 F | February (all zones) | All zones including 5a |
For a full breakdown of overwintering techniques and what to expect from kale that survives a PA winter, see the overwintering section in our kale growing hub.
Month-by-Month Task Calendar
Pin this to your garden shed. Dates assume central PA (zone 6a) — adjust 2 weeks earlier for zone 7a and 2 weeks later for zones 5a-5b.
| Month | Spring Kale Tasks | Fall Kale Tasks |
|---|---|---|
| January | Order seeds; plan varieties | Harvest overwintered kale on mild days |
| February | Start spring seeds indoors (mid-month); set up lights | Harvest continues under cover |
| March | Continue indoor growing; begin hardening off in zone 7a; transplant SE PA late month | Overwintered plants show new growth; harvest spring raab (flower buds) |
| April | Transplant all zones; direct sow in zone 7a; protect from cutworms; mulch after 1 week | Pull overwintered plants after raab harvest; replace with new spring transplants |
| May | Direct sow all zones; side-dress with nitrogen at 3-4 weeks; install row cover for pest prevention; water 1 inch/week | — |
| June | Harvest spring kale aggressively; pull plants if flavor turns bitter in heat; succession sow baby kale every 2 weeks | — |
| July | Pull last spring plants; clear bed for fall planting | Start fall seeds indoors or in shaded outdoor bed (critical month for fall timing) |
| August | — | Transplant fall seedlings; water deeply for first 2 weeks; mulch; install row cover against flea beetles |
| September | — | Side-dress with fish emulsion; enjoy reduced pest pressure; begin harvesting outer leaves |
| October | — | Harvest frost-sweetened leaves; apply straw mulch around bases; set up row cover hoops |
| November | — | Continue harvesting; drape row cover over hoops before hard freeze; harvest on above-freezing days only |
| December | — | Winter harvest under cover; water on thaw days; plan next year’s kale plantings |
Common Timing Mistakes in PA
Most kale timing problems in Pennsylvania fall into a handful of predictable patterns. Avoiding these saves you an entire season’s worth of frustration.
Mistake 1: Waiting Until After Last Frost to Transplant
Many new gardeners treat kale like tomatoes and wait until all frost risk passes. This wastes 2 to 3 weeks of prime spring growing weather. Kale handles frost down to 20 degrees without injury. Transplant 2 to 3 weeks before your last frost date, not after it.
Mistake 2: Starting Fall Seeds Too Late
This is the single most common kale timing error in PA. Gardeners wait until August to think about fall kale, but by then the clock is already running short — especially in zones 5a and 5b where the first frost arrives in late September. Start fall kale seeds in early July. If you miss July entirely, transplant purchased seedlings from a nursery in early August rather than starting from seed.
Mistake 3: Direct Sowing Fall Kale into Hot Soil
Soil temperatures above 85 degrees suppress kale germination. Mid-July garden soil in full sun often exceeds 90 degrees at the surface. Direct sowing into this heat produces spotty germination or outright failure. Start fall seeds in cell trays in shade or indoors, then transplant once seedlings are established.
Mistake 4: Not Adjusting for Day Length in Fall
A kale variety listed at 60 days to maturity will actually take 70 to 75 days in fall because decreasing day length slows photosynthesis. Always add 10 to 14 days to the seed packet’s days-to-maturity when calculating fall planting dates. This adjustment prevents the common problem of fall kale that is still immature when the first hard freeze arrives.
Mistake 5: Giving Up After Spring Kale Turns Bitter
Spring kale develops a stronger, sometimes bitter flavor once daytime temperatures regularly hit the 80s in June. Some gardeners conclude that kale does not grow well in PA and stop planting it. The reality is that the fall crop is where kale excels here. If spring kale disappointed you, try a fall planting — the difference in flavor is dramatic. Cold-sweetened October and November kale tastes nothing like heat-stressed June kale.
Recovery Plan: If you have completely missed the spring window, skip it and focus everything on a well-timed fall planting in early July. A single strong fall crop outproduces a mediocre spring crop in both volume and quality. You can learn about growing kale in raised beds or containers for even more flexibility with timing.
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 Planting Kale in Pennsylvania
1. What month should I plant kale in Pennsylvania?
For spring kale, transplant in late March (zone 7a) through late April (zone 5a). For fall kale, start seeds indoors in early to mid-July and transplant in August. The fall planting produces sweeter leaves and a longer harvest window. If you can only plant once, choose the fall timing.
2. Can I plant kale seeds directly outside in Pennsylvania?
Yes, for spring plantings once soil temperature reaches 45 F (typically mid-April in most PA zones). Direct sowing works less well for fall kale because July and August soil is often too hot for germination. For fall crops, start seeds indoors or in a shaded outdoor bed and transplant once seedlings have 3 to 4 true leaves.
3. How late can I plant kale in Pennsylvania for a fall harvest?
The latest you should start fall kale seeds is mid-July for zones 6a-7a and early July for zones 5a-5b. If you miss the seed-starting window, buy nursery transplants and set them out by mid-August. Planting later than late August does not give kale enough growing time before frost in most PA zones.
4. Does kale need full sun in Pennsylvania?
Kale grows best with 6 or more hours of direct sun but tolerates 4 to 5 hours. Partial shade actually helps spring kale by reducing heat stress and delaying bitterness. For fall kale, prioritize full sun since shorter days already limit the light the plants receive. South-facing beds and open areas produce the strongest plants.
5. How many days does kale take to grow in Pennsylvania?
Most kale varieties reach first harvest in 50 to 65 days from transplant. Red Russian is the fastest at 50 days; Winterbor and Lacinato take closer to 60 to 65 days. Add 10 to 14 days for fall plantings because declining day length slows growth. From direct seed, add another 10 to 14 days for germination and early seedling growth.
6. Is it too late to plant kale in August in Pennsylvania?
Not if you transplant established seedlings rather than sowing seeds. Transplanting 4-week-old seedlings in early August gives them enough time to reach harvestable size before frost in all PA zones. Transplanting after August 20 is risky for zones 5a-5b but can still work in zones 6b-7a where frost holds off until late October or November.
Continue Reading: Kale Growing Guides for Pennsylvania
- Growing Kale in Pennsylvania — complete hub guide with varieties, zones, and overview
- How to Grow Kale in Pennsylvania — step-by-step planting, care, and harvest techniques
- Growing Kale in Containers in Pennsylvania — pot selection, soil mixes, and feeding schedules
- Growing Kale in Raised Beds in Pennsylvania — bed setup, soil recipes, and planting layouts
- Kale Pests and Diseases in Pennsylvania — identification, prevention, and organic controls
- Best Vegetables to Grow in Pennsylvania — our full guide to the top crops for PA gardens