Just yesterday I started some chard, mustard greens, and several kales. In trying to find an appropriate place around here to germinate them, as the volunteer greenhouse is too hot right now, Jill Maybry—Butterfly and Delta Garden—and I did some digging to find the optimal germinating temperatures for these greens. Surprisingly, the optimal temperatures for these crops were between 80 and 88 degrees! This was kind of counter-intuitive, I think. At home, I guess I never really thought of it, as I would just direct sow the fall crop in the ground and hope for the best. Here, I plan on starting them in some shade, up-potting to 4” pots when they have true leaves, eventually transplanting to the beds the first week of October. At your house, a shaded area could mean a back porch or a car port or the like.

Along with these greens, I plan on direct sowing, this week, Golden Sweet Pea and Royal Snap Pea. Beds of collard greens and clover cover crops will go in very soon after.