April gardening tips

Seed starting in April
Photo: Kim Willis

Seed starting in April

Now is the time for gardeners in zones 4-6 to go full steam ahead with seed starting inside of those garden plants and flowers. Start seeds inside about 6 weeks before you would normally plant them outside in the garden. That would be beginning in early April for zone 7, maybe 6 and mid to late April for zones 4-5. This would include tomatoes, peppers, cabbage, marigolds, zinnias, and many other plants that are planted out after the danger of frost has passed or where you want them to mature before summer ends. Read the seed starting articles on the links at the end of the article.

One exception for starting seeds inside is for those vine crops which are difficult to transplant when they get large. That would include melons, pumpkins, squash and cucumbers. These should be started only 3-4 weeks before you would generally plant them in the garden.

In zones 5-7 lettuce, chard, beets, and other greens can be planted in cold frames outside or under plastic or fabric hoops. Peas can be planted in the ground as soon as it thaws in all zones, without any protection.

Some zone 4-6 gardeners may want to start the bulbs of canna’s and dahlias inside about the last week of April. This will make sure that the plants will be mature enough to bloom before the fall frosts. Pot them in good potting soil, place them in a sunny window with temperatures above 60 degrees and keep them watered. Plant outside after all danger of frost has passed. Planting hint; if you use generous sized pots you can simply sink the pot in the soil outside, which will make the bulbs easy to harvest and store in the fall.

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, Detroit Gardening Examiner

Kim Willis lives near Clifford, Michigan on a small farm that she shares with her husband and numerous animals. She works at the Lapeer County MSU Extension office and is a freelance country and garden writer. Her book Complete Idiots Guide® to Country Living was published in November 2008. Her...