packyderms_wife
Neither here nor there.
Planting Calendar - Gardening by the moon
This planting calendar helps you pick the best days for gardening tasks based a 200-year-old formula. Our readers swear by it! Learn more.
www.farmersalmanac.com
- 1st – 2nd
Good days for transplanting. Good days for planting beets, carrots, onions, turnips, and other hardy root crops where climate is suitable. - 3rd – 4th
Poor days for planting, seeds tend to rot in ground. - 5th – 6th
Start seedbeds and flower gardens. Good days for transplanting. Best planting days for fall potatoes, turnips, onions, carrots, beets, and other root crops where climate is suitable. - 7th – 11th
A most barren period, best for killing plant pests or doing chores around the farm. Good harvest days. - 12th – 14th
Fine for sowing grains, hay, and forage crops. Plant flowers. First two days are favorable days for planting root crops. Last day is a favorable day for planting beans, peas, squash, sweet corn, tomatoes, and other aboveground crops in southern Florida, Texas, and California. - 15th – 16th
Start seedbeds. Favorable days for planting aboveground crops, and leafy vegetables such as lettuce, cabbage, kale, and celery where climate is suitable. - 17th – 18th
Do clearing and plowing, but no planting. - 19th – 21st
Plant tomatoes, peas, beans, and other aboveground crops, indoors in the North and outdoors in lower South. - 22nd – 23rd
Poor planting days. Kill poison ivy, weeds, clear land, but no planting. - 24th – 25th
Extra good for vine crops. Favorable days for planting aboveground crops where climate is suitable. - 26th – 27th
Barren days, do no planting. - 28th – 29th
Good days for transplanting. Good days for planting beets, carrots, onions, turnips, and other hardy root crops where climate is suitable. - 30th – 31st
Poor days for planting, seeds tend to rot in ground.