Bloomsdale Long Standing
Spinach
🌱 40d to harvest
Rosette
Sweet, tender leaves with a cool, spinach-green allure—Bloomsdale Long Standing brings a lush, upright rosette that feels velvety…
Crop Dates
| Milestone | Date |
|---|---|
| Start Indoors | Apr 10th |
| Last Frost | May 8th |
| Transplant / Sow Outdoors | May 1st |
| Harvest Begins | Jun 10th |
| Harvest Ends | Sep 30th |
Crop Details
| Trait | Value |
|---|---|
| Days to Maturity | 40 |
| Sun Requirements | Full Sun |
| Growth Habit | Rosette |
| Support Needed | None |
| Planting Depth | Surface |
| Germination Temp (°F) | 70 |
| Min Soil Temp (°F) | 40 |
| Min Night Temp (°F) | 30 |
| Harden Off (days) | 5 |
Recommended Companions
Frequently Asked Questions
How do I manage downy mildew or bolting problems in Bloomsdale Long Standing (about 40 days) that start showing as yellow patches on leaves?
Downy mildew on leaf lettuce often begins as pale yellow areas that later turn gray-purple and spread during humid weather. Remove and discard the worst leaves, improve airflow, and avoid watering the foliage—water at the soil line in the morning. If it keeps worsening, treat with an approved fungicide labeled for lettuce/downy mildew and stop harvesting any leaves that are not yet safe per the label’s re-entry interval.
How often should I water Bloomsdale Long Standing during the main growing phase to keep heads tender and prevent bitterness?
Water to keep the top 1 inch of soil consistently moist, typically about 1–2 times per week depending on heat, with lighter, more frequent watering during hot spells. The moment the surface dries out and leaves look slightly wilted, increase watering to prevent stress-triggered bitterness and bolting. Use steady, gentle watering so the soil stays evenly moist—lettuce doesn’t tolerate drying out then soaking.
When is Bloomsdale Long Standing ready to harvest, and what signs should I look for?
Harvest at about 40 days when leaves are full-sized and crisp, but before the plant noticeably elongates or shoots a flowering stalk (bolting). For leaf lettuce type harvest, pick outer leaves when they’re about 4–6 inches long and keep the center growing; for a cut-and-come-again bed, take the largest outer leaves first. Don’t wait for flowers—once bolting starts, leaves become more bitter and tougher quickly.