University of Illinois Extension
So… When Should You Sow?
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[April 11, 2019]
Some of our earliest vegetables can be sown as soon as you can
carefully work the garden soil and once soil temperatures reach 45
and 50 degrees. You can place spinach and lettuce in the 45-degree
group, and peas, cabbage, Swiss chard, radish, and beets in the
50-degree group. Other vegetables can go out as well, and they are
planted as a root and will be protected by the soil, such as
asparagus, onion sets, potatoes and rhubarb. From there, the garden
soil continues to warm until we hit the upper limit for good
germination, and the remaining vegetables can be sown or
transplanted.
The days to germination can be as short as three to five days
upwards of 10 to 15 days. Root crops can be some of the slowest, so
do not panic. One garden trick for rows that will be slow to show is
to plant a crop like radish with it to "mark the row." Radish being
a short crop anyway will be long gone and will not interfere with
the other vegetable sown.
We consider those very early crops to be very hardy and able to
survive very cold temperatures, planted in a range of four to six
weeks ahead of the average frost-free date. As the soils continue to
warm, the next group known as frost tolerant (not able to actually
be frozen) can go out from seed or transplants between two and three
weeks ahead of the average frost-free date. Beet, carrot, radish,
and summer squash are examples for this group.
The second to last group, known as tender, is planted on the average
frost-free date. These crops will need to be protected if we get a
late frost or a threat of low temperatures.
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The last is the warm-loving vegetables that absolutely need warm
soils without any threat of cool temperatures. They are planted out
as seeds or transplants two weeks after the average frost-free date.
This last group to think of is the vine crops, mainly cucumber,
pumpkin, muskmelon and watermelon.
In the last two groups, there some vegetables that we think of
planting together, yet could be handled differently. Most gardeners
will plant tomatoes and peppers at the same time. We lose one to two
weeks on our tomatoes (a tender vegetable) if planted as a
warm-loving vegetable or run the risk of seeing our peppers
(warm-loving) damaged if planted at the same time as our tomatoes.
The same goes for summer squashes and the rest of the vine crops.
Summer squash falls into the tender group, while the other squashed
require that warmer soil.
The hard part of scheduling your sowing or transplanting is deciding
for your yard what you will be using as the average frost-free date,
since all planting dates are determined from there. The best I can
offer is a range for each of the four groups:
-
Very
Hardy – between April 10-25
-
Frost Tolerant – between April 25-May 10
-
Tender – between May 10-25
-
Warm
Loving – between May 25-June 1
Last point is there is a difference between the "average frost-free
date" and the "absolute frost-free date." Be careful as you read
seed packet labels or the tags with vegetable transplants, and sow
or plant accordingly.
[Richard Hentschel, Extension
Educator, Horticulture] |