| April lettuce bed Wednesday, April 1, 2026 April showers bring May flowers, fruits, herbs and vegetables! Now is the perfect time to get serious getting your spring garden planted and sown. In April, I usually have seeds and plants going indoors and outdoors. With all the selections they have at nurseries and big box stores, it is easy to skip this altogether and just buy plants to have an instant garden! Crops to plant in April Early April is a perfect time to plant cool season loving crops like Brussels sprouts, fava beans, beets, broccoli, cabbage, carrots, cauliflower, celery, collards, kale, lettuce, mustard, onions, parsley, parsnips, peas, potatoes, radishes, shallots, spinach, strawberries, Swiss chard and turnips. Local big box and nurseries have a variety available to put in your garden right now. Outdoor transplant calendar See this post for what to plant in April as well as links on how to grow each veggie. What to plant in the April edible garden We have fresh salads from the garden now. The greens that overwintered are lettuce, sprouting broccoli, cress, chickweed, sorrel, sweet mustard, chard, salad burnet, sorrel, blood veined sorrel and cultivated dandelions. The other herbs that overwintered are celery, carrots, parsley, chives, Egyptian walking onions, oregano, tarragon, sage, onions, shallots, winter savory and thyme. They are great adds to salads as well as cooked dishes. There are many volunteers sprouting from giant mustard, lettuce, celery and chives. These are the cool temperature lovers. Next month, the warm season loving volunteer veggies and flowers will be sprouting. Asparagus sprouts are large enough to harvest. We'll definitely be having asparagus for our Easter dinner. We can still get a surprise frost in April so you want to hold off on planting warm season crops outdoors like tomatoes, eggplant, peppers, beans and squash until May unless you can cover them or can bring them indoors if frost does visit your garden. Warm season lovers won't grow much anyway until the soil is nice and warm. I usually start and move them outdoors in May for our Zone 7 garden. If you want to see how early you can go, try using protection to keep them warm. Extend the season with protection for plants I have already transplanted petunias, Sweet William, marigolds, and lettuce plants outdoors. I have lettuce in pots in my portable greenhouse that I can cover if we get a freeze. A frost won't bother them. I planted them outdoors last week. The extra warmth helped them grow quicker, but is not needed for the plants to survive this time of year. To keep yourself in lettuce all season, do succession planting of new seeds or plants every 2-3 weeks. Just plant the number you would normally eat in a 2-3 week period. This will keep salads on the table continuously. Do succession planting for any vegetable you want to extend the harvest for. Keep the harvest going, do succession planting To get a jump on summer harvests, I usually start a variety of edibles indoors on the kitchen counter in both my Aerogarden, peat pods or peat pots. For the large seedlings like cucumber, squash, and watermelon, I start these in 3" peat pots. I have had great success in the Aerogarden in germination rates for those that sprout quickly (3-14 days). I have not had good luck for those that take 2-4 weeks to sprout. Seed starting tips for beginners You can get also get a jump on harvests by buying transplants. There are a wide variety available nowadays, including heirlooms. Fertilize When you plant, make sure to fertilize and add mycorrhizae in each planting hole. Mycorrhizae are beneficial microbes that help your plant roots absorb nutrients from the soil (once inoculated, you don't have to reapply). Espoma Bio-Tone starter contains both mycorrhizae and fertilizer. I also add biochar and worm castings in each hole. I add minerals via Azomite every other year. Using these amendments is when I had the most productive and disease free summer gardens. You can make your own all natural, organic fertilizer, too, inexpensively. Here is the link: Make your own fertilizer, it's all natural and inexpensive If you did not fertilize the entire garden bed before planting, be sure to add fertilizer to each planting hole per the directions on the package. Crops will need that burst of energy for the quick growth that spring brings. If you are re-using pots from last year, here is a link to get your potting soil ready to nourish your new plants: Re-energize your potting soil! It is important to get your potting soil so it can support this season's growth and veggie production. Be sure when you fertilize to mix it into the soil or apply before you put down a protective organic layer of mulch. This keeps the nitrogen from oxidizing and escaping into the air instead of staying in the ground to nourish your plant. To re-energize my potting soil, I add 1 part compost to 2 parts potting soil, Azomite for minerals, and Espoma fertilizer. Frost date importance The average last frost date in our area is April 2nd this year, but we can still get a stray frost in all of April. This is important to know for planting seeds and when to move plants into the garden. Frost date look up The seed packet tells you when to plant in relation to your last frost date. You will get the best results following the packet instructions. What do seed packets tell you? Planting early is not always a good strategy as different seeds need different soil temperatures before they will germinate or grow. Plant too early and the seed can rot before they have a chance to sprout. When to plant your veggies Pots will warm up quicker, but will also chill down faster. You can put your pots in a sheltered, sunny spot to get a jump on spring growth. Putting your pots on the south side of the house will provide the maximum warmth. I love planting greens in a large self-watering pot that I can keep on the patio, making it handy for picking a fresh salad for dinner, and to move to a cooler spot in the hot days of summer. When growing veggies in containers, they will require more watering and more fertilizer than if they were in the ground. In the summer, you may have to water some water lovers every day unless you use self-watering pots. For more on growing in pots: Decorative container gardening for edibles With the self-watering pots, your watering duties will be greatly reduced. Lettuce, greens, and herbs do fabulous this month. It is the time to indulge in daily salads and smoothies. Cool temperatures and lots of moisture produce the sweetest greens of the season. This year, you may want to save money or just want to be sure you can eat fresh veggies. Here is a garden that meets that need, even if you only have a small space, like a flower bed. Small space survival edible garden |
Victory Garden on the Golf Course
Wednesday, April 1, 2026
April 2026 Edible Garden Planner
Sunday, March 29, 2026
Growing collards and kale 101
| Potted kale, petunias and Egyptian walking onions |
![]() |
| Dwarf blue curled kale |
Several varieties of kale come available as bedding plants in late March. Since we live in Kentucky, there are always collards as well. Both can be planted into beds and pots in our Zone 7 garden now.
For any that I don't eat fresh, I blanche and freeze to add to a steamed veggie side dish or to soups. You do need to blanche kale and other greens to maintain the tasted. Freezing the extras for winter
Saturday, March 28, 2026
Growing onions 101
![]() |
| Bulbing onion flowering in late spring |
Sunday, March 22, 2026
Growing lettuce 101
| Red sails lettuce and petunias |
You can buy many different lettuce plants from nurseries or big box stores this time of year or, to keep yourself in lettuce all summer, practice succession planting and sow seed every 2-3 weeks. Lettuce is super easy to grow from seed and there are so many varieties to choose from seeds. I simply just scatter seeds on top of the soil and pat down either in the garden bed or pot. Keep moist and you will have lettuce seedlings within a week.
![]() |
| Lettuce in an Earthbox, self watering pot |
| Bolted Red Sails lettuce-cool looking, eh? |
Protection from the afternoon sun helps in lengthening the time before your lettuce bolts. There are few techniques you can use. Grow lettuce interspersed with taller veggies to give them shade protection, plant next to a wall that provides afternoon shade, cover with a shade cloth to keep them cooler or grow on the north side of your house. If growing in a pot, it is easy to just move the pot to a shadier, cooler spot when the temps start to rise.
Saturday, March 21, 2026
Growing spinach 101
Saturday, March 21, 2026
Sunday, March 15, 2026
What's happening in the mid-March garden
![]() |
| Daffodils and hyacinth blooming, daylilies sprouting |
![]() |
| Overwintering cabbage and broccoli |
Saturday, March 14, 2026
Indoor seed starting week 2
![]() |
| Hydroponic seed starting system Saturday, March 14, 2026 |
Now is the time to get the jump on summer harvests and start the warm weather loving seeds indoors. Here is what I started indoors in my second week of seed starting.
Summer greens-these are the greens I use for salad after lettuce has bolted in the summer. Aurora mixed colors orach, Rose orach, Double purple orach, Golden Giant amaranth (for leaves and seeds), Beetroot amaranth, Callelo amaranth, Rainbow quinoa (leaves and seeds).
Flowers-Orange King zinnia, Blush hollyhock, Purple stardust, Baby Blue Bouquet eucalyptus, Baby Blue Eyes, Rainbow Loveliness dianthus, Amadeo coneflower, Bluebird Forget-Me-Not, Scarlet echinacea, Platinum Blue, Blue Queen Butterfly Pea Vine, Blue Camas, Raspberry Daiquiri agastache, Sky Dance salvia, Kiwi Blue honeywort, variegated cockscomb, Red Raven cockscomb, Dwarf Coral cockscomb, Copper Spotted petunia.
The large flowers are for the pots in front, the smaller flowers for the pots with edibles, the dwarf cockscomb for around the flower bed perimeter and the perennials for the spots that either had annuals last year or the perennials didn't make it. I'll also supplement the border with marigolds because they are so cheery, they deter deer, and pollinators love them.
I'll start the larger seeds outdoors at the beginning of April like cucumber, squash, okra, pole beans, melons and flowers. I still also have seeds to start at our Master Gardener Demonstration Garden when they share the list of varieties they would like to grow this season.







