when is the usually safe time to put in plants in my garden in new england?
we still are getting frost in the morning.i heard it was ok to plant seeds.so when is a good time to put in the plants?
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- June 1st is an average safe date for frost sensitive plants in your general area. But you can plant frost resistant vegetable plants like broccoli, spinach (from seed), cabbage, and a few others. New England covers a large area of course. Please see the link below as it will probably answer all your questions. Best wishes.
- from seed, march to july you want to be sowing them into a pot with good soil then you want to be putting in a greenhouse or something similar to a greenhouse where it will be warm for them to germinate, once the head start popping through this normally take up to a week then you want to leave them for about another week and half to 2 weeks where they would be roughly then 8 - 12cm tall and probably strong enough to experience the outdoors. once planted in the garden outdoors you will need a cage of netting or a guard to keep birds out from eating them. also a few slug pellets are needed when in greenhouse or outdoors just spread a few round the base of the plant. REMEMBER: if its a hot day and green house is hot open the doors/windows or take plants outside for the day then put them back in at night, remember to water in the morning and at night either 1 is great and don't over water them if the soil is damp or wet leave it but if it dry then more water is needed. now and then just weed you patch outdoors when needed and just keep topping up water when needed ETC... good luck hopefully you will have nice crop:-) if you ain't got a green house you can buy propagatesor mini green houses ect if you have brought the pants from a garden centre just plant when they are around 12cm high then if its a really cold day or frost just give them LUKE warm water not hot. Jamie
- Depends. Peas, beets, spinach, coles (cabbage, broccoli, sprouts, etc.), onions, parsley, herbs, pansies and other frost resistant plants can be seeded or transplanted outdoors earlier (before freezing temperatures end), some as early as you can work the soil. They will not be severely affected by light frost (above 27 degrees). For beans, corn, tomatoes, potatoes, squash, petunias, marigolds, etc. wait until danger of frost is past. This varies based on locale. Talk to the local farmers and old gardeners. They watch for signs in nature like the trees blossoming, birds nesting, bug or worm activity. A general sign that frost danger has past is the first day when the high temp is 80 degrees F or above. A "last frost" date on the calendar can be no more than an average, and nothing you will want to risk plants on.
- having lived and gardened in northern vermont for 30 years, i can tell you one thing for sure. it's never a safe time unless it's july or august. there have been times when i was out planting seeds in the middle of may in snow flurries. i have had plants freeze on the 1st of june. gardening is a gamble. normally you should be good to put in plants by june 1st. you really don't gain anything by rushing it up there. a lesson i never learned.
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