Hey guys!
After looking for something like this with no avail, I finally stumbled across a website that gives me great information on one easy page.
Cornell has a great reference of seed starting temps, spacing, diseases, etc.
Thought I would share my find and happy planting!
https://www.gardening.cornell.edu/homega ... eb771.html
- rainbowgardener
- Super Green Thumb
- Posts: 25279
- Joined: Sun Feb 15, 2009 6:04 pm
- Location: TN/GA 7b
I like this for planting schedule which you can set to your zone:
https://www.thevegetablegarden.info/reso ... g-schedule
and if you google your area, you can find area specific info. For eg I did a search on "ohio planting calendar" and came up with this really nice info from OSU with seed starting times, planting times, plant spacing etc:
https://vegfruit.files.wordpress.com/201 ... plants.pdf
searching on "Cincinnati planting calendar" came up with this really nice vegetable planning guide, that also gives our average first and last frost dates, etc:
https://allthingsplants.com/apps/calenda ... nati,%20OH
so do look around for info specific to your area.
https://www.thevegetablegarden.info/reso ... g-schedule
and if you google your area, you can find area specific info. For eg I did a search on "ohio planting calendar" and came up with this really nice info from OSU with seed starting times, planting times, plant spacing etc:
https://vegfruit.files.wordpress.com/201 ... plants.pdf
searching on "Cincinnati planting calendar" came up with this really nice vegetable planning guide, that also gives our average first and last frost dates, etc:
https://allthingsplants.com/apps/calenda ... nati,%20OH
so do look around for info specific to your area.
What I like specifically about the Cornell site is it gives you planting temperatures, not necessarily dates. Here in Central Texas, if I would have planted my broccoli in the suggested date of Aug1- Sept 1st, they would have been exposed to 100+ temps.
But I do appreciate the more literature I can find, the better! I love lots of references!
Thanks for the input.
But I do appreciate the more literature I can find, the better! I love lots of references!
Thanks for the input.