Zone 5 · Leafy Greens Growing Guide
The most heat-tolerant and cold-hardy of all the brassica greens. Harvest outer leaves all season. Flavour improves dramatically after frost. A Southern US staple.
In Zone 5, Collard Greens can be planted outdoors from Mar 18 — the window closes around Sep 15.
Wide planting window. Fall plants can be harvested until hard freeze. Some winters they survive.
Zone 5 is split into two subzones. The a/b distinction affects your exact last frost date by 1–2 weeks -- meaningful for heat-sensitive crops and fruit tree hardiness.
| Subzone | Last frost | First fall | Season | Min temp |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 5a | May 5 | Oct 11 | ~158 days | -20 to -15°F |
| 5b | Apr 25 | Oct 17 | ~173 days | -15 to -10°F |
plant detects your subzone from your location and adjusts planting windows accordingly.
Here is what to expect at each stage — and what to do when you get there.
Keep soil consistently moist but not waterlogged. Most leafy greens germinate best at 50-65°F -- they actually prefer co
Thin seedlings to the recommended spacing -- crowded leafy greens bolt faster and produce less. The thinnings are edible
Begin harvesting outer leaves now -- this encourages more growth from the centre. Do not wait for the plant to be 'finis
Harvest cut-and-come-again -- remove outer leaves and let the centre keep growing. For butterhead types, harvest the who
Once bolting starts the flavour changes -- harvest everything immediately. Bolted leaves are still edible but more bitte
At peak: Collards are productive and heat-tolerant compared to most leafy greens
Collards are more forgiving than most leafy greens. They handle both heat and frost better than spinach or lettuce.
Heavy feeder. Nitrogen produces large, tender leaves. Feed monthly throughout the season.
Sow every 4 weeks from spring through midsummer. Collards are more heat-tolerant than most brassicas and can be harvested as cut-and-come-again from the lower leaves. A summer sowing started 8-10 weeks before first frost will produce the best harvest -- collards genuinely improve in flavor after light frost. Start the autumn batch earlier than you think you need to.
Some plants help Collard Greens thrive. Others compete or cause problems.
Something went wrong? Here is what likely happened and what to do differently next time.
What happened: Most leafy greens actually handle light frost well once established -- it can even improve flavour. But young seedlings are more vulnerable. If the damage happened at the seedling stage, a late frost likely caught them.
Next season: Cover seedlings with fleece if frost threatens in the first few weeks. Established leafy greens generally recover from light frost on their own.
What happened: Slugs love leafy green seedlings, especially in wet conditions. Downy mildew affects plants in humid, overcrowded conditions. Flea beetles leave tiny holes in leaves -- especially on arugula and kale.
Next season: Thin seedlings properly to allow airflow. Protect from slugs in the first few weeks. Row cover helps with flea beetles on susceptible varieties.
What happened: Leafy greens in waterlogged soil develop root rot quickly. More commonly, warmth and long days trigger bolting -- the plant sends up a flower stalk and the leaves become bitter. This is the plant completing its lifecycle, not a failure of care.
Next season: Bolting is largely about timing. Sow earlier in spring or switch to a fall sowing -- cooling temperatures signal the plant to keep producing leaves rather than flowering.
What happened: Irregular watering is a major bolting trigger in lettuce and spinach. A dry spell followed by heat pushes them to flower and seed rapidly.
Next season: Keep moisture consistent -- mulching around leafy greens makes a real difference. Water in the morning so leaves dry during the day.
What happened: Heat and long days cause most leafy greens to bolt -- this is the most common reason they fail. The plant is not dying, it is doing what it is designed to do. Once bolted the leaves become bitter and inedible quickly.
Next season: The fall sowing is almost always more successful than spring for leafy greens. Cooling temperatures give you longer, slower-bolting plants. Shade cloth can also extend the spring crop by a couple of weeks.
Something didn't work out? Here is what likely happened and what to do differently next season.
What happened: Most leafy greens actually handle light frost well once established -- it can even improve flavour. But young seedlings are more vulnerable. If the damage happened at the seedling stage, a late frost likely caught them.
Next season: Cover seedlings with fleece if frost threatens in the first few weeks. Established leafy greens generally recover from light frost on their own.
What happened: Slugs love leafy green seedlings, especially in wet conditions. Downy mildew affects plants in humid, overcrowded conditions. Flea beetles leave tiny holes in leaves -- especially on arugula and kale.
Next season: Thin seedlings properly to allow airflow. Protect from slugs in the first few weeks. Row cover helps with flea beetles on susceptible varieties.
What happened: Leafy greens in waterlogged soil develop root rot quickly. More commonly, warmth and long days trigger bolting -- the plant sends up a flower stalk and the leaves become bitter. This is the plant completing its lifecycle, not a failure of care.
Next season: Bolting is largely about timing. Sow earlier in spring or switch to a fall sowing -- cooling temperatures signal the plant to keep producing leaves rather than flowering.
What happened: Irregular watering is a major bolting trigger in lettuce and spinach. A dry spell followed by heat pushes them to flower and seed rapidly.
Next season: Keep moisture consistent -- mulching around leafy greens makes a real difference. Water in the morning so leaves dry during the day.
What happened: Heat and long days cause most leafy greens to bolt -- this is the most common reason they fail. The plant is not dying, it is doing what it is designed to do. Once bolted the leaves become bitter and inedible quickly.
Next season: The fall sowing is almost always more successful than spring for leafy greens. Cooling temperatures give you longer, slower-bolting plants. Shade cloth can also extend the spring crop by a couple of weeks.
Know what to look for before it gets out of hand — early identification is the most important step.
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plant uses your ZIP code and real frost data to tell you the right day — not just the right month. Get notified when your planting window opens, when to succession sow, and when to cut back for next season.
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plant monitors these conditions and sends an alert the moment they are forecast for your location.
Traditional growers have used lunar cycles to time planting and harvest for centuries. The moon affects moisture levels in soil and sap flow in plants.
These guides get better when growers share what they know. If something's off or you've learned something worth passing on, add it here -- accepted tips earn you a Founding Grower badge when plant launches.
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