If you're in your kitchen with an unopened seed packet and feeling guilty, take a breath. You likely haven't missed your chance. Most vegetables grow better when sown directly in warm soil, and there's still time to plant in many areas. Gardeners who began indoors in February are now facing leggy seedlings under worn-out grow lights. They're also puzzled about why their tomatoes look yellow. You’re about to catch up with them.
Here’s the catch. There's a real difference between "you can still sow this" and "you can still sow this and expect a decent harvest." The seven crops below pass both tests in most of the country. Each has a realistic deadline based on your zone, a note for extreme temperatures, and the common mistake that wastes late sowings.
Before we dive in, here’s a quick note on timing. The dates below assume you've passed your last frost date and your soil temperature is right for each crop. If you’re unsure of your last frost date, check the National Weather Service or the Old Farmer's Almanac. They both have quick zip-code lookups. Soil temperature is more important than air temperature for direct sowing. A $5 soil thermometer pushed 2 inches into the bed tells you if you should sow today or wait. Below 50°F, nothing germinates well. Between 50 and 60°F, cool-season crops thrive. Above 60°F, warm-season crops germinate quickly.
Here’s when each region’s main direct-sow window runs by zone:
- Zones 3–4 (northern Minnesota, Maine, parts of Montana): late May through July
- Zones 5–6 (most of the Northeast, Midwest, mid-Atlantic): mid-May through early July
- Zones 7–8 (Mid-Atlantic south, upper South, Pacific Northwest, parts of California): late April through June
- Zones 9–10 (Florida, Gulf Coast, southern California, southern Arizona): the spring window for warm-season crops is mostly over. However, a fall sowing window opens in August. Cool-season crops can still go in early spring elsewhere.
If you're in zone 9 or warmer and reading this in late spring, skip ahead to the fall section at the end. Your main planting comes later in the year, so you have plenty of time to plan.
1. Beets
Direct sow beets until eight weeks before your first fall frost. For the best main-crop quality in spring, plant through about mid-June in most areas. Growing beets is easy, and they don't like being moved. That’s why pros usually sow them directly.
The mistake people make is sowing too thickly and never thinning. Each beet "seed" is actually a cluster of two to four seeds fused together, so even when you space them carefully, you'll get clumps. Thin them ruthlessly to one plant every 4 inches when they're about 2 inches tall. The thinnings are excellent in salads, so it's not waste. Sow a row every three weeks until midsummer for a continuous harvest from July through October.
Detroit Dark Red is the reliable American workhorse. Bull's Blood gives you exceptional leaves for salads alongside decent roots. Chioggia produces the pink-and-white striped roots that look great on the plate but lose their pattern when cooked, so save them for raw use.
2. Bush and Pole Beans
The latest sensible date for green beans is about ten weeks before your first fall frost. Across most of zones 5–7, that means you've got until late June or early July. Sow them in May or early June and you'll be picking by late July; sow in late June and you'll start in late August. Either way they'll keep cropping until the first frost knocks them down.
Beans want soil that's at least 60°F, which most of the country has hit by now if you're past your last frost date. Sow them 1 inch deep and 6 inches apart, in double rows about 12 inches apart. They hate cold wet feet — if you're in a part of the country having a wet spring and your soil is heavy, hold off three or four days rather than sowing into mud. They'll catch up.
The single biggest mistake with pole beans is not putting up the supports before sowing. Pole varieties need 6-foot supports in place before the seeds go in. If you wait until the seedlings are up, you'll damage the roots putting the structure in around them, and the plants sulk for two weeks.
Provider is the most dependable bush green bean across nearly every climate. Blue Lake (both bush and pole forms) is the classic for flavor. Kentucky Wonder is the time-tested pole variety that crops heavily into fall. Dragon Tongue beans have purple-streaked pods. They turn green when cooked but taste best raw.
3. Summer Squash and Zucchini
Direct sow once your soil hits 65°F, which across most of zones 5–7 usually occurs in late spring. The latest sensible sow date is about twelve weeks before your first frost.
If you've never grown zucchini before, brace yourself. Two plants will feed a family of four, and three plants will feed your entire neighborhood whether they want it or not. The temptation is always to plant too many. Don't.
Sow seeds on their edge, not flat, about an inch deep. Plant two seeds per station, 36 inches apart. When both germinate, snip off the weaker one with scissors at soil level. Don't pull it out — you'll disturb the roots of the one you want to keep. Squash bugs are the dominant pest pressure across most of the country, and they'll demolish a young plant before it gets going. Inspect the underside of leaves twice a week for the bronze egg clusters and squish them on sight. Row covers laid over the seedlings until flowering buys you a critical head start while the plants establish.
Black Beauty is the classic dependable zucchini. Cocozelle has the proper Italian striped texture and far better flavor than supermarket squash. Yellow Crookneck is the best of the yellow summer squash for flavor and crop length. For a patty pan, Sunburst gives you yellow scalloped fruit that look great roasted whole.
4. Pole Beans for Heat (Yard-Long, Asian Beans)
In zones 7 and warmer, yard-long beans, or asparagus beans, do well. They thrive in summer heat when regular green beans drop their flowers. They keep producing even in July and August, unlike other beans. These beans are a different species, more closely related to cowpeas than common green beans. They can handle the heat that stops regular varieties.
Sow them when your soil is above 65°F. Provide a 7-foot support and pick the pods young, at 12–18 inches, before they become tough. Red Noodle and Stickless Wonder are the most common varieties from US seed suppliers.
If you're in the South or Southwest and have seen your green beans fail in past summers, this is the solution you need.
5. Carrots
Direct sow carrots about ten weeks before your first frost. This timing is key because carrots take longer than expected. Most varieties need 70–80 days to grow to a usable size. Carrots won’t transplant, so every "carrot seedling" at garden centres is less than ideal. Sow directly or don’t bother.
Carrots are often seen as hard to grow, but this isn’t entirely true. The main issues are carrot rust fly and rough seed beds. Rust flies love the smell of bruised leaves, especially when you thin them. So, sow as thinly as possible from the start to avoid thinning later. A 24-inch barrier of fine mesh or floating row cover keeps the flies away. They don’t fly higher than that. Planting carrots near onions or garlic is common advice, but it doesn't really help, despite what gardening books say.
Prepare the seed bed by raking it to a fine tilth. Carrot seedlings have weak shoots and cannot break through clumpy or stony soil. Spend ten minutes on this, and you’ll avoid patchy germination.
For storage, Danvers 126 and Scarlet Nantes are reliable across most areas. If you want young, sweet carrots in summer, try Little Finger and Adelaide, as they germinate quickly and crop fast. If your soil is rocky or heavy clay, the round Parisian Market types, like Tonda di Parigi or Paris Market, grow small roots that don’t need deep, loose soil.
6. Salad Greens (Cut-and-Come-Again)
You can sow salad greens from spring's start through early September across most zones, restarting every two to three weeks. Once you start regular successional sowing, you'll never buy a bag of supermarket salad again.
The crop that beginners miss is mustard greens. They germinate in three days, tolerate hot weather better than most lettuces, regrow fast after cutting, and give you a peppery edge that makes ordinary salads taste like something. Sow them alongside loose-leaf lettuce, arugula, mizuna, and tatsoi for a proper cut-and-come-again mix.
The mistake is sowing one big batch and letting it bolt. A single 3-foot row sown every two weeks gives you a steady supply for months. One 15-foot row sown all at once gives you a glut, then nothing, then bolted plants. Set a calendar reminder if you have to.
Once daytime temperatures regularly hit the 80s, lettuces start running to seed within days. Switch to heat-tolerant varieties from late spring onward — Jericho, Muir, and Nevada hold well into hot weather. Iceberg-type heading lettuces do not handle heat at all and should be reserved for spring and fall in most of the country.
7. Winter Squash and Pumpkins
The last sensible direct-sow date for winter squash is about fourteen weeks before your first frost. Squash need a long growing season — about 100 to 120 days from sowing to mature fruit — so even in zones 5 and 6 you've got until mid-June to get them in.
Sow two seeds per station, 36 inches apart for bush varieties and 60 inches apart for trailing types. Squash are the ultimate "feed me" crop. They want a hole dug 12 inches deep, half-filled with well-rotted manure or compost, and the soil replaced on top. Plant directly into that. Then mulch heavily and water deeply once a week rather than little and often.
Butternut Waltham is the most reliable winter squash across the country and stores until February. Long Island Cheese is the underrated pie pumpkin that's far better in actual pies than the standard orange jack-o-lantern types. Delicata gives you the smaller stripey skin-on roasting squash you've been paying $4 each for at the farmers' market. For an actual carving pumpkin, Howden produces the right shape and size on a manageable plant. Avoid the giant pumpkin varieties unless growing a 200-pounder is the actual goal — they take over the garden and produce inedible flesh.
What to skip if you're starting now
Tomatoes, peppers, eggplants, and tomatillos are ready for direct sowing in most areas. You can still plant them as transplants, but starting from seed means racing against the fall frost in October, which likely leads to loss. Buy plants from a local nursery instead of a big-box store. Nursery plants are healthier and give you a six-week head start for $3 each, resulting in better harvests.
Sweet corn is on the edge. You can direct-sow it until mid-spring in many zones, but germination struggles in soil below 60°F. If you want corn this year and have passed your last frost date, sow now. You may need to fill gaps with seeds two weeks later.
Brussels sprouts, leeks, and other long-season cool-weather crops should already be growing for a fall harvest. If you haven't started them, order plug plants for delivery in the next two weeks instead of starting from seed.
A note for the South and Southwest
In zones 9 and warmer, your planting window for warm-season crops mostly closed in March. The good news is your main fall growing season is the strongest of the year. Mark your calendar for August to direct-sow fall crops like beans, summer squash, cucumbers, and a second round of warm-season vegetables. These will grow until November and December. The cool-season crops (carrots, beets, lettuces) become your winter garden in zones 9 and warmer. Sow them from October to January for harvests while the rest of the country is covered in snow.
In zone 10, tomatoes are a year-round project. Eggplants and peppers can crop into December. Your gardening calendar is different from the rest of the country, and "what to plant in May" articles often don't apply to you. The basics for each crop still hold when your sowing window opens.
The single thing that matters most
Soil temperature. Problems with late sowings come from planting in ground that's too cold. A $5 soil thermometer pushed 2 inches into the bed shows you in thirty seconds whether you should sow today or wait three days.
If your soil is cold and a wet week is coming, don’t rush it. Wait. Plants sown in warm soil next week will catch up and surpass those sown in cold mud now. Waiting three days can save you two weeks of recovery time later in the season.
Get the seven crops listed above in the ground over the next couple of weeks. You’ll be picking, pulling, and storing right through to your first fall frost. Late starters often think they’ve missed the window, but they rarely have.





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