Every month in the Irish kitchen garden has a job. Most of them take thirty minutes. Here is the full year, month by month, for Italian seed varieties in Irish conditions.
This calendar is written for the Irish midlands. Add one week for the west and north. Subtract one week for Wexford and Cork. Adjust for your own microclimate once you have a season or two behind you.
January
What to do
Order seeds. January is the month to do it, before the good varieties sell out. BloomySeeds stocks over 114 Italian varieties from Franchi Sementi. The ones that run out first: San Marzano tomato, Costoluto Genovese, Cuore di Bue, Radicchio di Treviso.
Clean and sterilise seed trays and pots. Scrub with diluted washing-up liquid, rinse thoroughly, allow to dry. Old compost left in pots carries disease. Start clean every year.
Check stored root vegetables and squash. Remove anything rotting before it spreads.
Harvest whatever is still growing: cavolo nero, leeks, stored garlic, any overwintering spinach under fleece.
What is in the ground
Cavolo nero (still producing if you planted in July). Leeks. Overwintering garlic planted in October. Parsley under cloche if you were organised in autumn.
What is on the table
The jarred passata you made in August. The dried tomatoes in olive oil. The green tomato chutney. The cavolo nero and cannellini soup. January is when the summer work pays off.
February
What to sow
Indoors on a heated propagator (20 degrees minimum): San Marzano tomato, Costoluto Genovese, Cuore di Bue, Roma VF. One seed per 9cm pot. Seed compost only, not multi-purpose. These need 10 to 12 weeks indoors before planting out in May.
Also indoors: Peppers and chillies if you grow them. These need even longer than tomatoes.
What to do
Prepare raised beds if the ground is workable. Add compost. Do not dig clay soil when it is wet. You will compact it and create problems that take years to fix.
Check garlic. It should be showing green shoots. If it is not, it may have rotted. Dig one up carefully and investigate.
Fix any damage to cloches, polytunnel, or cold frames from January winds.
March
What to sow
Indoors: Parsley Vintage Common Flat Leaf (slow to germinate, needs 3 to 4 weeks). Leeks. Onions.
Direct outdoors (under cloche or in polytunnel): Broad beans if you did not sow in autumn. Peas. Spinach. Carrots in a sheltered raised bed.
Direct outdoors (no protection needed): Beetroot Chioggia from mid-March in the south and east. Wait until April elsewhere.
What to do
Apply copper slug tape to raised beds now, before the slug season begins in earnest. March soil temperature rises and slug activity increases fast.
Pot on tomato seedlings from February into 12cm pots. Bury the stem deep. Tomatoes form roots along the buried stem. A leggy February seedling becomes a strong March plant if you bury it correctly.
Order slug nematodes (Phasmarhabditis hermaphrodita) for April application.
April
What to sow
Indoors: Courgette Striato d’Italia (one seed per 9cm pot, on its side). Basil Classico Italiano on the warmest windowsill you have (18 degrees minimum overnight). Cavolo Nero for an early autumn harvest.
Direct outdoors: Beetroot Chioggia, second sowing. Carrot Autumn King or Nantaise. Lettuce. More spinach.
Polytunnel: First cucumber sowing if you have a polytunnel. Lettuce and salad leaves for May harvesting.
What to do
Apply nematodes to soil in early April. Soil temperature needs to be above 5 degrees. Water in thoroughly after application. This is the most effective single slug-control intervention you can make.
Begin hardening off tomato seedlings. Take them outside for one hour the first day, two hours the second, increasing gradually over two weeks. Bring back inside on cold nights. Do not rush this. A tomato plant setback by cold in May loses two weeks of growth.
Plant out onion sets.
May
What to sow
Indoors: Cavolo Nero (second sowing for succession). Fennel Mantovano.
Direct outdoors from late May: S. Anna Climbing French Bean. One seed every 20cm up a 1.5 metre cane frame. Sweetcorn in blocks of at least 16 plants (it is wind-pollinated and needs to be in a block, not a line). Cucumber outdoors in sheltered spots from late May.
What to plant out
After last frost (mid to late May): Courgette Striato d’Italia. One or two plants maximum. At 90cm spacing. They will fill the space you give them.
Polytunnel (mid May): San Marzano and other tomatoes into their final positions. Minimum 45cm spacing. Feed weekly from first flower. Install supports immediately.
Also: Basil into a sheltered pot outdoors or a warm windowsill. Not into open ground. Basil outdoors in Ireland without protection fails in most years.
What to do
Side-shoot tomatoes weekly. Remove any shoot growing from the junction between the main stem and a leaf branch. Do it when they are small, 2 to 5cm, by snapping off with fingers.
Watch for slugs constantly. The combination of warming soil, soft new growth, and spring rain makes May the highest-risk month.
June
What to sow
Direct outdoors: Beetroot Chioggia, third sowing for autumn harvest. More salad. More spinach. Fennel Mantovano if not yet done.
Polytunnel: Cucumbers into final positions. Basil alongside polytunnel tomatoes (companion planting: the aromatic oils from basil deter some tomato pests).
What to harvest
Broad beans. Pick when pods are fat but before they go leathery. Eat within hours of picking if possible. The sweetness deteriorates within a day.
Peas. Same rule: pick daily, eat immediately.
Salad and spinach. Cut outer leaves only. The plant keeps producing for weeks.
What to do
Apply nematodes again. Second round, 6 to 8 weeks after the first.
Begin weekly tomato feed with liquid tomato fertiliser (high potassium). Do not miss a week. Irregular feeding produces irregular fruit.
Plant out cavolo nero seedlings from April sowing. They need 60cm spacing. They will look small now and enormous by October.
July
What to sow
Indoors: Radicchio di Treviso or Radicchio Castelfranco. Sow now for October to December harvest. Spring onions for autumn.
Direct outdoors: More salad, more spinach, more beetroot. These are the succession sowings that keep the garden producing through September.
What to harvest
Courgettes. Pick at 10 to 12cm. Do not leave to become marrows. Once a courgette becomes a marrow, the plant stops producing more courgettes. Pick daily in peak season.
Climbing beans. From late July, pick daily. Stringless when young. They toughen quickly if left.
Fennel bulbs. When they are approximately tennis-ball sized. Larger ones can bolt and become woody.
What to do
Stop tomatoes. Pinch out the growing tip when you count 4 to 5 trusses of fruit. Any new growth after this point will not ripen before October. The plant’s energy goes to the existing fruit instead.
Watch for blight on outdoor tomatoes. Brown lesions on leaves, white mould underneath, spreading rapidly. Remove all affected material immediately. Polytunnel tomatoes are significantly less vulnerable.
August
The month of abundance
August is why you grow a kitchen garden. Everything arrives at once. This is not a problem. This is the point. Here is your priority list.
What to harvest and process
Tomatoes: First polytunnel tomatoes ripen in early to mid August. Make passata immediately. A San Marzano glut waits for no one. One kilogram of fresh San Marzano makes approximately 700ml of passata. Six plants produce enough passata to last a family through winter.
Climbing beans: At absolute peak. Pick daily, eat the same day, freeze what you cannot eat.
Courgettes: Still producing. Make courgette soup and freeze it in portions. August courgette soup in November tastes like summer.
Basil: Make pesto in bulk. Freeze pesto in ice cube trays. Once you have frozen pesto, you use it on everything through winter.
What to sow
Polytunnel: Winter salad leaves, overwintering spinach, late lettuce. These will produce from September to November.
Outdoors: Overwintering onion sets from mid August for harvesting next June.
September
What to harvest
The last of the tomatoes. The last climbing beans. The first cavolo nero leaves (pick outer leaves; the plant continues producing). Radicchio beginning to heart up.
Garlic planted last October is ready when the foliage has died back and turned brown. Dig carefully. Lay out to cure in a dry, airy place for two weeks before storing.
What to do
Plant garlic for next year. October/November varieties (Lautrec Wight, Solent Wight, or any softneck variety) go in from mid September. 10cm deep, 15cm apart, pointed end up. Garlic is one of the easiest and most rewarding crops in the Irish garden.
Save seed from your best tomatoes, courgettes, and beans. Choose the best fruit from the healthiest plant. Italian heirloom varieties are open-pollinated. You can grow the same variety next year from your own seed.
Apply nematodes for the third time. Autumn slug populations are high as temperatures drop and slugs seek shelter and food before winter.
Clear bean frames and polytunnel tomatoes. Compost all healthy material. Do not compost blighted tomato plants.
October
What to harvest
Cavolo nero at its best. A frost improves the flavour by converting starches to sugars. Pick outer leaves and the plant regrows.
Radicchio. Harvest entire heads when firm. Bitter, beautiful, and extraordinary in a salad with pear and walnut.
Green tomatoes from any remaining outdoor plants. They ripen indoors in a warm, dark place over one to three weeks. Or make green tomato chutney. One kilogram of green tomatoes, three apples, two onions, malt vinegar, brown sugar. It will be ready for Christmas.
What to do
Clear the polytunnel thoroughly. Remove all plant material. Wash down the plastic with diluted bleach. This removes overwintering disease spores and pest eggs. A clean polytunnel in October means a healthier polytunnel in May.
Add compost to all raised beds. No need to dig it in. The worms do that work over winter. A five centimetre layer on top is enough.
November
What to harvest
Cavolo nero. Leeks. Overwintering spinach under cloche. That is it. And it is enough. A plate of cavolo nero with garlic and chilli olive oil, or a leek and potato soup, or spinach wilted with butter and lemon, is good food. The garden has earned this simplicity.
What to do
Protect cavolo nero from pigeons. They discover it in November when everything else is gone. A simple frame of wire netting is enough.
Order seed catalogues for next year. In November the next season feels abstract. By January it will feel urgent. Order now while you have time to think.
December
What to harvest
Cavolo nero. Leeks. Whatever is left in the polytunnel salad bed. The stored passata, dried tomatoes, frozen pesto, green tomato chutney.
What to do
Rest. The garden rests in December and so should you. Do the bare minimum: harvest what is there, protect what needs protecting, let the rest wait.
Review the year. What worked. What failed. What you want to grow again. What you will not bother with. Make notes while it is fresh. By February you will have forgotten the details.
Order seeds. The cycle begins again.
The One Rule That Covers All of It
Thirty minutes, most Sundays. That is all it takes to keep an Irish kitchen garden running through the season.
Not every Sunday. Not perfectly. Just most of them, most of the time, doing whatever that particular Sunday requires.
In February that is sowing tomatoes on a warm windowsill. In May it is planting courgettes and checking for slugs. In August it is picking beans and making passata. In October it is harvesting cavolo nero and adding compost to the beds.
The calendar tells you what that Sunday requires. The rest is just doing it.
All Italian seed varieties in this calendar are available from BloomySeeds. Every variety is sourced directly from Franchi Sementi, Bergamo, and DAFM registered for sale in Ireland.
