digitS'
Garden Master
The Scotch kale does fine each year if the aphids leave it alone. (The Siberian kale has big trouble with those bugs no matter where it is.)
Growing collards in the open garden in 2018 really made the aphids happy. I should have sprayed them but I was still trying to decide if I would like collards. Not so great to be trialing it for taste and not want to eat it because of bugs. Well, anyway ...

I tried a "better" location this year. Here it is today after the snow melted off it
.
This is just about the shadiest location in my backyard garden. You can see the chives just behind these plants. It's protected from the wind and had only a little trouble from the slugs (which wrecked my very late bok choy planting nearby!).
We have harvested from it several times. I think that I'm beginning to like collards. That we did NOT grow Portuguese kale this year is forcing me to be more receptive ... DW has decided that she likes collards. Me: I was very happy to stay with the Portuguese kale - which is very similar, admittedly.
location/location
Steve
Growing collards in the open garden in 2018 really made the aphids happy. I should have sprayed them but I was still trying to decide if I would like collards. Not so great to be trialing it for taste and not want to eat it because of bugs. Well, anyway ...

I tried a "better" location this year. Here it is today after the snow melted off it
This is just about the shadiest location in my backyard garden. You can see the chives just behind these plants. It's protected from the wind and had only a little trouble from the slugs (which wrecked my very late bok choy planting nearby!).
We have harvested from it several times. I think that I'm beginning to like collards. That we did NOT grow Portuguese kale this year is forcing me to be more receptive ... DW has decided that she likes collards. Me: I was very happy to stay with the Portuguese kale - which is very similar, admittedly.
location/location
Steve
). The bees love it, it makes a great wind break for part of the garden, and we have Pacific Island friends who will gladly take all that we give away. It is a really healthy vegetable, once you get past the bitterness. I hope pickling (which we are trying this year) turns out to make them more palatable.
(!!!) Couldn't ask for a better year, we've been picking buckets & the harvest continues even now. We've been giving so many away the neighbors are getting Zucchini Syndrome, and are afraid to answer their door. Took enough to work a couple times for the whole plant!
!
