Seed Planting Calendar

Updated December 9, 2022

If you’re new to growing vegetables or just need a refresher, here’s a basic vegetable planting calendar to get you started. We’ve also included a few herbs that are often grown similarly to vegetables. The dates are approximate — and based on USDA Plant Hardiness zone 5 — and will vary depending on your location, the weather, and the time you have available. Keeping your own planting records, with notes on how these seeding dates worked (or didn’t work) for you, will help you develop a planting calendar that is specific to your site and growing habits.

If you aren’t able to grow your own seedlings, you can buy them at farmers’ markets, food co-ops, local greenhouses and farm stores in the spring and follow the transplanting dates below. Visit mofga.org/mofga-seedling-map for an interactive map detailing where to purchase MOFGA-certified seedlings.

Visit our fact sheets page for more information on the basics of organic vegetable gardening, making your own seed starting mix and more.

Download as a PDF.

March 1Start indoors: celery, celeriac, parsley (3/1 to 3/15); scallions, onions, leeks, shallots (2/20 to 3/15)
March 14Start indoors: head lettuce, bulb fennel, chicories (including escarole, dandelion greens and radicchio)
March 21Start indoors: peppers (3/1 to 3/21), eggplant (3/21 to 4/1)
April 1Start indoors: bok choy, broccoli, Brussels sprouts, cabbage, cauliflower, Chinese cabbage, collards, kale, kohlrabi, Swiss chard
April 14Start indoors: tomatoes, tomatillos, husk cherries, basil  

Start outdoors: beets, carrots, cilantro, dill, leaf and head lettuce, parsnips (4/15 to 5/15), peas, arugula, radishes, salad turnips, shallots (4/15 to 5/30), spinach, bunching onions for summer harvest (4/15 to 5/1), onions from seeds or sets  

Transplant out: head lettuce, fennel, chicory, onion, shallot and scallion seedlings
May 1Start indoors: melons, cucumbers, squashes (zucchini, summer and winter squashes, pumpkins)  

Start outdoors: beets, carrots, leaf and head lettuce, peas, arugula, radishes, salad turnips, spinach, Swiss chard (5/1 to 5/31)  

Transplant out: bok choy, broccoli, Brussels sprouts, cabbage, cauliflower, Chinese cabbage, collards, kale, kohlrabi, Swiss chard (5/1 to 5/15, when 4 to 5 weeks old), leeks (5/1 to 5/15)
May 14Start indoors: broccoli, cabbage, cauliflower for fall crop  

Start outdoors: beets, leaf and head lettuce, cilantro, dill, peas, arugula, radishes, salad turnips, spinach
June 1Start outdoors: bush green beans, bush dry beans, pole beans, beets, Chinese cabbage (5/30 to 7/30), carrots, corn, leaf and head lettuce, peas, potatoes, arugula, radishes, salad turnips, spinach  

Transplant out: celery, celeriac, parsley (6/1 to 6/15); tomatoes, tomatillos, husk cherries, peppers, 3/21 sowing of eggplant, basil, sweet potato slips (6/1 to 6/15)   Transplant or direct seed out: melons, cucumbers, squashes (zucchini, summer and winter squashes, pumpkins)
June 14Start outdoors: beets, corn, leaf and head lettuce, cilantro, dill, peas, arugula, radishes, spinach, salad turnips   Transplant out: cannabis, 4/1 sowing of eggplant, 5/15 sowing of broccoli, cabbage and cauliflower
June 21Start outdoors: bush green beans, carrots
July 1Start outdoors: beets, corn (short-season varieties), kale, leaf and head lettuce, peas, arugula, radishes, spinach, salad turnips, storage turnips (7/1 to 8/1)
July 14Start outdoors: bush green beans, beets, carrots, rutabaga, leaf and head lettuce, cilantro, dill, peas, arugula, radishes, daikon and other winter radishes (7/15 to 8/15), spinach, salad turnips, hardy bunching onions for fall and spring harvest (7/15 to 8/15)
August 1Start outdoors: beets, leaf and head lettuce, peas, arugula, radishes, spinach, salad turnips
August 14Start outdoors: leaf and head lettuce, cilantro, dill, arugula, radishes, spinach, salad turnips
September 1Start outdoors: leaf lettuce, arugula, radishes, shallots for spring green onions, spinach
October 15Start outdoors: garlic
Planting calendar adapted from an article by Jean English, and updated with input from Caleb Goossen and Holli Cederholm

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