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Broccoli Season in India: Complete Growing Guide for All Regions

Broccoli is one of the most rewarding cool-season vegetables to grow in India — a nutritional powerhouse that thrives in the Indian winter and delivers generous harvests from a relatively small garden space. Once considered an exotic vegetable, broccoli is now widely grown in home gardens across India, from the plains of Punjab to the terraces of Kerala.


Broccoli Season in India — Region-wise Guide

Region Sowing Time Transplanting Harvest
North India (plains) September–October October–November December–February
South India / Kerala October–November November–December January–March
Western India September–October October–November December–February
Hill stations (1000m+) February–March March–April May–July

How to Grow Broccoli from Seed

  1. Seed starting — sow seeds in seed trays, 0.5 cm deep; use well-draining seed mix
  2. Germination — 5–7 days at 18–25°C
  3. Seedling care — keep in bright indirect light; water regularly but avoid waterlogging
  4. Transplanting — transplant at 3–4 weeks when seedlings have 4–5 true leaves; space 45–60 cm apart
  5. Head formation — central head forms 60–80 days after transplanting
  6. Harvesting — harvest when head is firm and dark green, before flowers open; cut with 15 cm of stem
  7. Side shoots — after central head harvest, side shoots continue producing for 4–6 weeks

Growing Conditions

  • Sunlight — full sun (6+ hours); essential for head formation
  • Temperature — 15–25°C ideal; heads may button (form prematurely small) in heat above 30°C
  • Soil — rich, well-draining, slightly alkaline (pH 6.0–7.0); add lime if soil is acidic
  • Watering — consistent moisture; irregular watering causes hollow stems
  • Fertilising — high nitrogen at planting; switch to phosphorus-rich fertiliser when head begins forming

Common Problems & Solutions

Problem Cause Solution
Yellowing leaves Nitrogen deficiency Apply nitrogen-rich fertiliser
Caterpillar damage Cabbage white butterfly Neem oil spray; fine mesh netting
Small/premature heads Heat stress or transplant shock Shade cloth; consistent watering
Hollow stems Boron deficiency or irregular watering Consistent watering; borax solution

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Frequently Asked Questions

Q: Can broccoli be grown in Kerala?
Yes — broccoli grows well in Kerala from October to February in the cooler winter months. In hilly areas of Kerala (Munnar, Wayanad), it can be grown for a longer season.

Q: Why is my broccoli head turning yellow?
Yellowing indicates the head is over-mature and beginning to flower. Harvest immediately. To prevent this, monitor heads daily once they reach 10–12 cm diameter.

Q: How many heads does one broccoli plant produce?
One central head plus multiple side shoots over 6–8 weeks of continued harvest.


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