News

During winter, people might eye cabbages and kales for eating, but their relatives, ornamental cabbages and kales, can fill a different kind of hunger – visual cravings on cold, gray days.&#8… ...
Ornamental kale and cabbage are edible; however, they are more bitter than their vegetable garden relatives of cabbage, broccoli and cauliflower.
The showy centers of ornamental kale and cabbage range in color from white to light pink, from dark pinks to vivid fuschia. The color of the outer leaves ranges from blue-green and olive green to ...
Ornamental cabbage has a more uniform look compared to kale. Pigeon Purple forms round semisolid heads, and the outer leaves maintain a darker green with purplish veins.
Ornamental grasses add texture and interest to any landscape and are generally pretty low-maintenance. Here's a gorgeous option with many benefits.
Ornamental cabbage and kale are easy ways to bring color to your garden in fall and winter – usually until the first heavy snow of the season covers them up.
Ornamental kale and cabbage are very popular and durable fall plantings. They are large plants that can cover a lot of space in the garden and they require very little maintenance.
The outer collar of leaves are blue-green and newer central leaves, a contrasting white, pink or purple color. Light: Plant in a full-sun location. Water needs: Prefers a moist, well-drained soil.
Cabbage and kale are biennial crops that require two seasons to flower – a vegetative season, which usually occurs in cool months and a reproductive season when temperatures increase.
DECORATIVE forms of cabbage and kale have been increasing steadily in popularity in recent years and they are a very useful addition to the usual palette of winter bedding plants. When the cool ...
The frilly leaves are a solid purple-red that intensifies as the temperatures get colder during the winter. This is true for all of the ornamental kale and cabbage varieties.