Growing Guide
 
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Lettuce

Vegetable (Cool Season) - Salad Greens

Lactuca sativa
Asteraceae Family

With the variety of colors, shapes and flavors available, your salads may never be the same. Lettuce is adapatable to many growing conditions, but likes it cool - around 60 F to 65 F. Grow in spring and fall, and slow bolting by shading summer crops.

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Site Characteristics
Sunlight:
  • full sun
  • part shade
Yields best in full sun. Part shade helpful when it’s hot.

Soil conditions:

  • requires well-drained soil
Tolerant of a wide range of soils, but prefers well-drained, cool, loose soil with plentiful moisture and pH 6.2 to 6.8. Sensitive to low pH. Lime to at least 6.0.

Special locations:

  • outdoor containers
Plant Traits

Lifecycle: annual

Ease-of-care: easy

Height: 0.5 to 2 feet

Spread: 0.5 to 2 feet

Foliage color:

  • light green
  • medium green
  • dark green
  • red
  • purple
  • variegated

Foliage texture: medium

Shape: cushion, mound or clump

Romaine (Cos) varieties tend toward upright.

Special Considerations
Tolerates:
  • frost - Will withstand light to moderate frost. Hardened seedlings more tolerant than mature plants.
Special characteristics:
  • not native to North America - Mediterranean origin. Was cultivated by Egyptians 6,500 years ago.
Special uses:
  • edible landscaping
Growing Information
How to plant:

Propagate by seed

Germination temperature: 40 F to 85 F - Seed can go dormant at high temperatures. Best germination is below 70 F.

Days to emergence: 7 to 14 - Germinates in about a week at 50 F, 2 days at 70 F.

Seed can be saved 1 year.

Maintenance and care:
Direct seed or transplant in early spring, as soon as you can work the soil. To get an early start, prepare beds the previous fall by working in manure or compost and raking smooth to leave a fine seedbed.

Direct-seeding: Sow seed 1/8 inch deep, 1 inch apart in rows 12 to 18 inches apart. When plants have two or three true leaves, thin to 12-inch spacings for crisphead varieties, 6 to 10 inches for other types. You can also lightly broadcast seed (particularly of looseleaf varieties) in a patch instead of a row.

Transplants: Sow in 1-inch cells 3 to 4 weeks before transplanting outside. Harden seedlings by reducing water and temperature for 3 days before transplanting. Hardened plants should survive 20 F. Space crisphead transplants 12 inches apart in rows 18 inches apart. Space other varieties 6 to 10 inches apart in rows 12 to 18 inches apart.

Seeds need light to germinate, so do not plant too deep.

Make succession plantings every week or two. Grow several varieties with different maturity dates for a continuous supply.

Lettuce has a shallow root system. Keep soil moist to keep plants growing continuously. Mulch to retain moisture and suppress weeds (unless slugs are a problem).

Moisture stress and high temperatures, particularly at night, encourage bolting. As the season progresses, plant more bolt-resistant varieties. Locate plants where they will be partially shaded by taller nearby plants, latticework or other screen.

Use row covers to protect very early plantings from cold, to protect young plants from insects, and (supported by hoops) to shade crops when warm weather arrives.

For fall crops, time maturity around time of first expected frost. Mature plants aren’t as tolerant of freezing as seedlings.

Pests:
Aphids
Leafminers
Leafhoppers
Cabbage loopers
Cutworms
Wireworms
Slugs
Diseases:
Damping off
Downy mildew
Mosaic
Fusarium
Varieties
Browse lettuce varieties at our Vegetable Varieties for Gardeners website.

There are five main types of lettuce:

Looseleaf (var. crispa) - Easy to grow. Matures quickly. You can start harvesting leaves as soon as 4 weeks after planting. Great for early-season plantings. Wide variety of leaf shapes and colors. 45 to 60 days to full maturity.

Butterhead (bib, loosehead, Boston) - Exceptionally good flavor and quality.   Forms loose heads with oily leaves. 55 to 75 days to maturity.

Romaine (Cos, var. longfolia) - Upright, elongated heads. (Some grow nearly 2 feet tall.) More tolerant of warm weather and less likely to bolt than other lettuce types. Red varieties as well as traditional light green. Most take about 70 days to mature.

French (summer crisp) - Midway between butterhead and crisphead.   You can harvest early like leaf lettuce or wait until heads form.   50 to 75 days.

Crisphead (iceberg, var. capitata) - The familiar spherical heads found in grocery stores. Most difficult varieties to grow. Requires long cool season. Best chance of success is by setting out transplants in early spring. Will bolt quickly in response to stress. 75 or more days.

Choose slow-bolting varieties for later plantings that may encounter hot weather.

Some varieties recommended for New York include:

Looseleaf:

Black Seeded Simpson
Green Ice
Ibis
Lollo Rossa
New Red Fire
Oak Leaf
Prizehead
Red Sails
Ruby
Salad Bowl
Slobolt

Romaine:

Cosmo Savoy
Green Towers
Little Gem
Parris Island
Valmaine (a.k.a Paris White or Valmaine Savoy)

Butterhead:

Buttercrunch
Esmerelda
Four Seasons
Sangria
Winter Density

French:

Sierra

Crisphead (Iceberg):

Great Lakes (Fall)
Ithaca
Summertime
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