Livingston Seed Lettuce Select Salad Blend Seeds Packet
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Livingston Seed Lettuce Select Salad Blend Seeds Packet

Original price was: $1.99.Current price is: $0.59.

SKU: 8312928639 Category:

Description

Soil – Just your regular garden soil. pH of 6.5 is best. Good drainage and high level of organic matter for best results.

Sun –  full sun (6-8 hours) is best, however, most mixes will do just fine in partial shade. You can also grow lettuce mix indoors easily by a sunny window or under grow lights.

Spacing – that’s the best part. Not like head lettuce, these mixes don’t need almost any spacing. Lettuce seeds are so tiny that in order to space them correctly most growers start lettuce indoors and transplant to the garden when the plants are a few inches tall. The seeds in loose leaf mixes can be sprinkled 1/4”- 1/2” apart.

When to sow – Just like regular lettuce, mixed lettuce like cool weather. You can start sowing outdoors 2-6 weeks before your average last frost date as long as you can work the soil.

For continues crop, sow successively every 3 weeks until the weather gets too hot or until two weeks before the first fall frost if you live in a cooler climate.

So for example, here in NC, zone 7B, I can start sowing in the beginning of March (last frost date 4/15). I’ll keep sowing every three weeks until the middle of May because in June it’s already too hot for the seeds to germinate. Then I’ll wait until the temperatures drop in the end of September to start sowing lettuce mix again.

As you can see in the pictures, I still have the mix growing in the garden and we still eat fresh salads. Soon, the temperatures will drop to where the leaves won’t survive outdoors without protection. If I cover my beds with greenhouse film, the greens won’t grow anymore but will last for months under the covers.

If you live in the North, you can probably keep planting through the growing season. If you want your lettuce to last the winter, you will have to cover it much sooner then I cover mine.

Days to germinate – in most mixes, seeds will germinate between 5-10 days.

Days to harvest –  you can start harvesting baby leaves at around 3 weeks. I usually get three cuttings from my lettuce mix. So I harvest, they grow again, I harvest, they grow again, then I harvest and pull the plants out, clean the garden and sow new seeds.

How to sow –  dig a very shallow trench, about 1/8” deep. Then sprinkle seeds, try to space them 1/4” -1/2” apart but don’t sweat it. I never really pay attention to in row spacing and they always grow just fine.

Cover the seeds lightly with 1/8” of soil and water well. Keep the soil moist until seeds germinate.

Harvesting and Processing Lettuce Mix

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8 thoughts on “Growing and Using Lettuce Mix”

  1. linda

    Would you also take picture of your whole bed? it’s hard to tell how you plant, on raising bed? or just on ground?

    Zoom in pictures are pretty but you are teaching us how to plant something. We certainly do admire your artistic photographic skill.

    Reply

    1. Lee

      Yes, of course! I got this new $800 new macro lens and got carried away. Sorry! Will take another photo tomorrow and add it to the post. Thanks so much for the feedback. I appreciate it.

      Reply

  2. Wildrosepines

    You make it look so easy!!!I tried to grow leaf lettuce – and failed. miserably. If I look at a flower seed it grows – veggies, not so much.
    I can get my lettuce to about 1/2″. The same happened with my cucumbers. I got 2 peppers off of 3 plants. Tomatoes were a HUGE disappointment with about 15 total off of 6 plants. Squash, I LOVE squash, I got 1 large & 1 small butternut and 3 acorns the size of softballs that had zero flavor.
    The 6 potato plants were actually successful, I’ll do 60 next year and I got a bunch of bitter carrots.
    All of my soil is amended as I have the opposite problem of you. Pure SAND. It is like living at the beach without the water! I use only raised beds (no treated material except for the flowers) black topsoil mixed with peat, sand and organic material.
    I will try again next year because I am forever the optimist! If I fail again I will get a CSA membership and continue to grow beautiful flowers

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