Denise Cares wrote:... it is just 3-6 leaves each plant altho they are a decent size 5 in across. It would be nice if it were thicker heads! I have the same thing happening with cauliflower and bok choy- i.e. spindly plants.
Are they getting enough hours of sunlight? At this time of year, plants may "live", but not thrive due to lack of hours and strength of light.
I have a mini variety of Romaine growing in a bin on my front porch. I used my own seed, so I figured whatever I got would be worth the little bit of care they needed. I've gotten enough to pick individual leaves for sandwiches, but they are definitely growing minimally at this point (mid November). I suspect that by the time the light improves in the spring they will just bolt.
However, I'm a fair bit further north than you are, and we get a lot of winter cloud cover.
I've read that "winter harvesting" is more just the plants being cool enough they don't go bad, but they aren't appreciably growing. To have them big and able to be harvested in Nov, they have to be planted early summer to mid-Aug to accomplish that. I planted some peas late August. They've got lots of flowers, but I've only had a small handful of tiny pods. I mostly planted them to keep the soil microbes happy, so the handful was a nice bonus and the flowers are cheery, but I think all my pollinators are hibernating already!