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Lollo Bionda

Lollo · Asteraceae

Lollo Bionda is an Italian loose-leaf lettuce with tight curls, bright green color, and a mild, sweet bite. It is grown as much for texture and visual lift as for yield, and it performs better in mixed seasonal plantings than many delicate leaf types. Key facts: 50–60 days to maturity, 4+ hours of sun, 6–8 " spacing. Container-friendly (minimum 1-gallon pot).

Updated June 1, 2026 · Backed by 5 cited sources
Overview

At a Glance

The essentials first: timing, light, spacing, seed-starting, container fit, and overall size.

Days to maturity
50–60 days
Sun
4+ hours
Spacing
6–8 "
between plants
Container
Yes
1+ gallon pot
Planting window

Zone Planting Guide

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Resilience

Plant Health

Stress tolerance, resistance notes, and the most common problems to watch for as plants mature.

Tolerance
Heat: Moderate Cold: Moderate Drought: Low

Watch for these first

Sort
Issue Severity Category Peak window
Bolting Vernalization-induced bolting
High Physiological Mar Peak window months: Mar.

Lettuce bolting is the plant shifting from leaf production to flower/seed production — and it's mostly triggered by photoperiod (day length), not heat. MSU research shows: cold weather during seedling growth followed by long summer days (14+ hours of daylight) is the strongest trigger. Heat above 80°F speeds it along once it starts, but day length is the primary cue. Once a central stalk emerges and the plant commits to flowering, leaves turn bitter within 3-5 days from chemicals called sesquiterpene lactones. There's no way to reverse it. Plant slow-bolt cultivars, time spring sowings to avoid late-cold + early-long-day overlap, and harvest cut-and-come-again style to extend the window.

Triggers: Per MSU Extension, the real trigger is cold spring growth (vernalization) followed by long summer days (>14 hours), not heat alone. Above 68°F the plant 'devernalizes' (reverses progress toward flowering) which is why fall-sown lettuce bolts less. Heat above 80°F accelerates once flowering starts but isn't the primary cue. Drought stress and pest pressure can also accelerate.

Risk fades when: Bolting is irreversible once the central stalk emerges. The plant is done as a salad crop. Pull it, save seed if it's an open-pollinated variety you like, or compost. Plant fresh seed for fall harvest after midsummer when nights lengthen again — fall lettuce rarely bolts.

Corn earworm / tomato fruitworm Helicoverpa zea (= tomato fruitworm = cotton bollworm = soybean podworm)
High Pest Jul–Sep Peak window months: Jul, Sep.

Corn earworm is the same species as tomato fruitworm and cotton bollworm — a polyphagous caterpillar that bores into ears of corn through fresh silks, into tomato and pepper fruit, into lettuce heads, and into bean and pea pods. In sweet corn, losses can reach 50%. The species migrates north annually from southern overwintering grounds; in much of the northern US, it does not survive the winter when temperatures drop below 30°F.

Triggers: Overwinters as pupa in top 2-4 inches of soil where winter temps permit. North of I-70 (Illinois IPM): does not reliably overwinter — populations arrive via migration mid-July through September. Females prefer fresh corn silks for egg-laying; older silks rejected.

Risk fades when: Wisconsin Hort, Illinois IPM

Damping off Pythium spp. / Rhizoctonia solani / Fusarium spp.
High Disease May–Aug Peak window months: May, Jun, Jul, Aug.

A seedling killer caused by several different fungi working together. It hits vegetables, flowers, herbs, microgreens, and cover-crop seedlings the same way — seeds rot before they emerge, or young seedlings collapse right at the soil line. Wet seed-starting mix and poor airflow in seedling trays are the classic conditions.

Triggers: Wet soil or starting mix, poor drainage, seedlings packed too tightly, contaminated trays or media, and stagnant air all favor damping-off.

Risk fades when: Drying the soil surface and improving airflow slows new spread. Collapsed seedlings don't recover, but the rest of the tray can be saved.

Damping off symptoms
Damping off of coffee seedlings caused by Fusarium sp. — Photo: Scot Nelson · CC0 1.0
Downy mildew (lettuce) Bremia lactucae
High Disease Fall Peak window months: Sep, Oct, Nov.

The most common and damaging foliar disease of lettuce. It causes light green to yellow angular patches on the upper leaf surface, bounded by the veins, with a white fluffy growth on the underside. Older, outer leaves are hit first, and severe infections make heads unmarketable. It spreads in cool, damp weather with prolonged leaf wetness.

Triggers: Cool, moist conditions with leaf wetness are required for infection. Spores are short-lived and dispersed by wind during moist periods. Most active at 50-64°F; activity falls off above about 70°F.

Risk fades when: Warm, dry weather suppresses the pathogen. Three dry days with highs above 70°F exits the active infection window, though infected leaves stay damaged.

Downy mildew (lettuce) symptoms
Pathogen: Cercospora beticola — Photo: Plant pests and diseases · CC0 1.0
Lettuce drop (Sclerotinia) Sclerotinia minor, Sclerotinia sclerotiorum
High Disease May–Aug Peak window months: May, Jun, Jul, Aug.

A soilborne rot that attacks the crown and lower leaves where they touch the ground. Infected tissue turns into a brown, soft decay, the outer leaves wilt, and eventually the whole plant collapses, usually near maturity. White cottony growth and small hard black resting bodies form on the rotted crown. Wet soil and cool, moist conditions drive it.

Triggers: Wet soil conditions favor both Sclerotinia species. Cool, moist weather is needed for S. sclerotiorum to produce its airborne spores; S. minor infects crown and lower leaves in contact with the soil. Sclerotia survive in soil for 2 to 3 years.

Risk fades when: Drying soil slows new infection. Five dry days exits the active window, though established crown rot does not reverse and sclerotia persist in soil.

Lettuce drop (Sclerotinia) symptoms
Pathogen: Cercospora beticola — Photo: Plant pests and diseases · CC0 1.0
Tip burn Calcium transport disruption in leaf margins
High Physiological Mid-summer Peak window months: Jun, Jul, Aug.

Tipburn looks like a disease but it's the same mechanism as tomato blossom-end rot — calcium can't reach the fast-growing inner leaves of the lettuce head, the cells collapse at the margins, and brown necrotic patches appear. Most commonly triggered by a drought-then-rain cycle: the plant grows slowly when dry, then growth explodes when water returns and the new leaf cells outpace the calcium supply. Heat and rapid nitrogen-fed growth make it worse. Closed-head varieties (iceberg, butterhead) hide tipburn inside the head until cut open — by then it's too late. Open-leaf and loose-leaf lettuces show it earlier on outer leaves and can sometimes be trimmed. Foliar calcium sprays don't fix it because calcium can't move through phloem to inner tissue; the only prevention is steady soil moisture + slower growth.

Triggers: Per UC IPM and Cornell Vegetable Program: tipburn results from calcium-transport failure in expanding inner leaves. Triggers: drought-then-rain swings (USU), high humidity reducing transpiration (Cornell), excess nitrogen pushing rapid growth, soil pH outside 6.0-6.8. Closed-head varieties hide tipburn inside until harvest; open-leaf shows it earlier.

Risk fades when: Foliar calcium sprays don't reach inner head leaves and won't reverse damage already done. Once tipburn shows, the head is compromised — trim outer leaves on open types or harvest early. Prevent next planting via consistent moisture, lower-nitrogen fertilization, and avoiding mid-summer heat-stressed crops.

Aphids Multiple genera: Myzus persicae (green peach aphid), Aphis gossypii (melon aphid), Macrosiphum euphorbiae (potato aphid), Brevicoryne brassicae (cabbage aphid)
Moderate Pest Mid-summer Peak window months: Jun, Jul, Aug.

Aphids are soft-bodied sap-sucking insects that cluster on tender new growth. Most established plants tolerate moderate populations and will outgrow damage on their own, but aphids are the most important plant virus vectors in the garden, transmitting more than 100 plant viruses including potato leafroll, cucumber mosaic, and turnip mosaic. Honeydew excreted while feeding supports sooty mold growth and attracts ants that protect aphids from natural enemies.

Triggers: Optimal development at ~75°F (green peach aphid) per UC IPM Floriculture; melon aphid develops fastest above 75°F. Many species heat-intolerant above 90°F and crash in mid-summer. Soft new growth and over-fertilization with high N favor population buildup. Females give live birth parthenogenetically most of growing season — one generation in ~1 week under optimal conditions.

On Lollo Bionda Lettuce: Tender new growth attracts colonies, especially in mild spring weather.

Prevention: Encourage beneficial insects, wash colonies off with water, and avoid over-fertilizing with nitrogen.

Risk fades when: Per UC IPM and Clemson HGIC, populations crash in mid-summer heat (>90°F) for many species, return in cooler conditions

Bottom rot (lettuce) Rhizoctonia solani
Moderate Disease Oct Peak window months: Oct.

A soilborne rot that starts on the lower leaves touching the ground, producing rusty-brown sunken lesions that spread up into the head. Affected leaves turn slimy and a brown, dry rot can move into the heart of the plant. It is favored by warm, humid conditions and by heads sitting on wet soil.

Triggers: Rhizoctonia solani is most active in warm, humid weather. Infection begins where lower leaves contact moist soil, so dense heads and wet ground raise risk.

Risk fades when: Drier soil and foliage slow spread. Three dry days reduces active risk, though rotted tissue stays damaged.

Bottom rot (lettuce) symptoms
Pathogen: Cercospora beticola — Photo: Plant pests and diseases · CC0 1.0
Flea beetles Phyllotreta cruciferae (crucifer), Epitrix spp. (potato/tuber/eggplant), Phyllotreta striolata (striped)
Moderate Pest Mar–Jun Peak window months: Mar, Jun.

Flea beetles are small (1/16-inch) shiny beetles that jump like fleas when disturbed. They chew small round 'shothole' or 'pinhole' damage in leaves and can destroy emerging cotyledons of broccoli or eggplant in 24 hours. Most species are host-family specific — crucifer flea beetle on brassicas, tuber flea beetle on potatoes, eggplant flea beetle on solanaceous crops.

Triggers: Overwinter as adults in leaf litter and field margins. Active at mid- to late-spring temperatures. Warm winter → higher next-spring populations (NC State). Hot dry conditions amplify damage on stressed seedlings.

Risk fades when: UMN: 1-2 generations in Minnesota, populations crash after mid-June

Gray mold Botrytis cinerea
Moderate Disease Summer Peak window months: Jun, Jul, Aug.

Fuzzy gray mold on flowers, fruit, and wounded tissue. It thrives in cool, humid, enclosed spaces — University of Minnesota notes this is unlikely to be a problem in open home gardens and rare even in field tomatoes. It's mostly a greenhouse and high-tunnel concern, included here because SoilStack supports those growing environments.

Triggers: Develops at 60-75°F with humidity above 80%. Infection requires 4-6 hours of standing water on the plant tissue. UMN's data shows it's unlikely in open home gardens.

Risk fades when: Temperatures above 82°F suppress growth and spore production. That's the published threshold.

Gray mold symptoms
Raspberry fruit with gray mold (Botrytis cinerea) infestation — Photo: Schlaghecken Josef · CC BY 4.0
Root knot nematode Meloidogyne spp. (M. incognita, M. hapla, M. javanica, M. arenaria)
Moderate Disease Winter Peak window months: Jan, Feb, Dec.

Microscopic soil-dwelling roundworms that burrow into plant roots and cause swollen knots (galls). Above ground, the plant looks stunted, yellowed, and wilted even with plenty of water. They attack over 2,000 plant species, so almost nothing is safe. They're most active in warm soil (70-85°F) and do more damage in sandy soils, where they move easily. Once a bed has them, populations stick around for years.

Triggers: Soil temperatures of 70-85°F are ideal for them; below 60°F they go dormant. Sandy soils make it easy for them to move and reproduce, while heavy clay slows them down considerably. In warm soil, a full generation completes in about 27 days.

Risk fades when: Activity drops sharply once soil cools below 60°F. Damage stops accumulating for the season, but the population stays in the soil and returns when warmth does.

Root knot nematode symptoms
Root galls on tomato (Solanum lycopersicum) caused by Meloidogyne incognita — Photo: Plant pests and diseases · CC0 1.0
Septoria leaf spot (lettuce) Septoria lactucae
Moderate Disease May–Aug Peak window months: May, Jun, Jul, Aug.

A foliar disease that produces small, irregular tan to brown spots peppered with tiny dark fruiting bodies, usually starting on the older outer leaves. Heavy spotting reduces quality and can cause leaves to yellow and die. It spreads in wet weather and from infected seed or debris.

Triggers: Wet foliage and splashing water spread the spores. Favored by extended leaf wetness; spots carry tiny dark fruiting bodies visible up close.

Risk fades when: Dry foliage stops new spread. Three dry days exits the active window; existing spots remain.

Septoria leaf spot (lettuce) symptoms
Pathogen: Cercospora beticola — Photo: Plant pests and diseases · CC0 1.0
Slugs and snails Cornu aspersum (brown garden snail), Deroceras reticulatum (gray garden slug), Limax maximus, Arion spp.
Moderate Pest Spring Peak window months: Mar, Apr, May.

Slugs and snails are nocturnal mollusks that chew irregular holes in leaves and clip off succulent seedlings. They leave characteristic silvery slime trails. Hermaphroditic and prolific, brown garden snails lay around 80 eggs per month for up to six clutches per year.

Triggers: Active at night and early morning in damp conditions. Coastal CA and southeast — active year-round. Spring rains and dense ground cover (mulch, debris, weeds) create harborage.

On Lollo Bionda Lettuce: Moist mulch and dense low foliage create daytime shelter.

Prevention: Morning watering, barriers, and sanitation reduce damage.

Risk fades when: UC IPM

Thrips Frankliniella occidentalis (western flower thrips), F. tritici (eastern flower thrips), F. fusca (tobacco thrips), Thrips tabaci (onion thrips)
Moderate Pest Spring Peak window months: Mar, Apr, May.

Thrips are tiny (1/16 inch) slender insects with fringed wings that puncture and rasp leaf surfaces, leaving silver stippling with black frass dots. The biggest concern is virus vectoring: western flower thrips is the principal vector of tomato spotted wilt virus (TSWV) and impatiens necrotic spot virus (INSV), which affect more than 600 plant species. Greenhouse and high tunnel infestations can be devastating.

Triggers: Hot dry weather; greenhouse/high tunnel environments. Female lays eggs inside leaf tissue. 2 larval stages feed; 2 non-feeding pupal stages in soil/litter. Lifecycle 10-21 days. Many overlapping generations. Bridge crops (spring wheat, peach, strawberry per NC State) build populations before vegetable hosts available.

Risk fades when: Wisconsin Hort, NC State

Leafminers Liriomyza sativae, Liriomyza trifolii, Pegomya hyoscyami (spinach), Phytomyza gymnostoma (allium)
Low Pest Sep–Oct Peak window months: Sep, Oct.

Leafminers are tiny fly larvae that feed between the upper and lower surfaces of leaves, creating winding pale tunnels or blotchy patches. They rarely kill plants but can ruin the marketability of leafy greens grown for foliage. Allium leafminer is an emerging pest in the eastern US (first detected in Pennsylvania in 2017) that damages onions, garlic, leeks, and chives.

Triggers: Liriomyza trifolii: 1 generation in ~1 month at typical greenhouse temps, 14 days at 95°F, 64 days at 59°F (UC IPM). Adults active mid-day. Allium leafminer emerges late March-early April, second flight September-October. Broad-spectrum insecticides trigger outbreaks by killing parasitoids.

Risk fades when: UMD

5 more issues below · Show all 15 ↓
Feeding & picking

Nutrition & Harvest

How hungry the plant is, what ripe harvest looks like, and how long the crop keeps after picking.

Feeding
Nutrition
Feeding intensityLight feeder
RecipesRoot Drench, Worm Castings Topdress
Plant relationships

Companion Planting

Helpful neighbors can support growth or deter pests. Keep antagonistic plants separated to reduce stress and competition.

Avoid planting near
Sun Gold Sunflower
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What you'll need

Growing Supplies

Hand-picked for your Lollo Bionda Lettuce, with the extension research behind every recommendation.

Seed starting tray + heat mat

For gardeners who start seeds indoors, this combo improves even germination. Warm-season crops benefit from bottom heat. Look for a rigid tray, cell inserts with drainage, and a heat mat paired with a thermostat.

Source: Utah State University Extension; Iowa State University Extension; Mississippi State University Extension

Our pick

Seedling Heat Mat + Thermostat Combo

Same trusted mat with a digital thermostat so you can dial in exact soil temperature. Peppers want 80-85°F, tomatoes 75-80°F.

paid link ?When you shop on Amazon using this link, SoilStack earns a small commission at no extra cost to you. It's how we keep the site free and the calendar ad-free. Every product on this page was hand-selected based on university extension research. When you shop on Amazon using this link, SoilStack earns a small commission at no extra cost to you. It's how we keep the site free and the calendar ad-free. Every product on this page was hand-selected based on university extension research.
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Mulch / landscape fabric

Nearly every garden benefits from mulch for weed suppression, moisture conservation, and soil temperature moderation. For most home gardeners, quality organic mulch is the better buy over landscape fabric.

Source: Penn State Extension; Wisconsin Horticulture; Illinois Extension

Our pick

Cleaned Wheat Straw Mulch (3 cu ft, ~20 lbs)

Thoroughly cleaned wheat straw at 3 cubic feet, marketed specifically for vegetable gardens rather than animal bedding or decoration. Better per-pound economics than the 1 cu ft option, with the same extension-recommended material. Strong sales volume (2K+ bought past month) supports product consistency.

paid link ?When you shop on Amazon using this link, SoilStack earns a small commission at no extra cost to you. It's how we keep the site free and the calendar ad-free. Every product on this page was hand-selected based on university extension research. When you shop on Amazon using this link, SoilStack earns a small commission at no extra cost to you. It's how we keep the site free and the calendar ad-free. Every product on this page was hand-selected based on university extension research.
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Drip irrigation / soaker hose kit

Every gardener benefits from putting water at the root zone instead of on the leaves, because drip and soaker systems reduce foliar disease pressure by limiting leaf wetness and soil splash. A quality kit should include a backflow preventer, filter, pressure reducer, and UV-resistant tubing.

Source: Iowa State University Extension; Colorado State University Extension; UMass Extension

Our pick

Complete Garden Drip Irrigation Kit

Designed for beginners with a step-by-step setup guide. Adjustable emitters, both tubing sizes, and all connectors included.

paid link ?When you shop on Amazon using this link, SoilStack earns a small commission at no extra cost to you. It's how we keep the site free and the calendar ad-free. Every product on this page was hand-selected based on university extension research. When you shop on Amazon using this link, SoilStack earns a small commission at no extra cost to you. It's how we keep the site free and the calendar ad-free. Every product on this page was hand-selected based on university extension research.
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Row cover / frost blanket

Row cover adds frost protection, speeds early growth, and physically excludes insect pests without spraying. Look for spun-bonded fabric with a stated weight and frost rating, UV resistance, and enough width for hoops or low tunnels.

Source: University of Maryland Extension; University of New Hampshire Extension; Colorado State University Extension

Our pick

Frost Blanket (10'x30')

Thicker 1.2 oz fabric rated to protect down to 28°F. Covers 300 sq ft — enough for multiple raised beds in a single sheet.

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Research

Sources

Reference material and extension guidance used to build this growing guide.

university Clemson HGIC, Lettuceuniversity University of Minnesota Extension, Growing lettuce, endive and radicchio in home gardensuniversity Oregon State Extension, Growing Lettuce & Other Greensseed_catalog Annie's Heirloom Seeds, Lolla Bionda Lettuceuniversity Cornell Vegetables, Disease-resistant lettuce varieties
Internal links

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