🌱 furrow/ Best crops

Growing guide Β· Michigan

Best Vegetables to Grow in Michigan

Michigan's cool springs and crisp falls make it ideal territory for peas, kale, and broccoli β€” crops that hit peak flavor when nights dip below 50Β°F. Garlic and onions round out a productive season by using ground that would otherwise sit idle.

Temperate climateUSDA zone 614 crops

Michigan gardeners work with two distinct cool seasons bookending a warm summer. Last frost dates range from mid-April in the southern tier to late May in the Upper Peninsula, giving most of the state a reliable 6–8 week spring window before heat arrives β€” long enough to harvest peas, radishes, lettuce, and spinach before July. A matching fall window opens in August, when soil is already warm for germination but cooling air keeps crops sweet.

The Great Lakes moderate Michigan's temperatures, but they also bring unpredictable late-spring cold snaps and early-fall frosts that can catch gardeners off guard. This makes frost-tolerant crops especially valuable: they can shrug off a surprise 28Β°F night under row cover while tender crops would be lost. Crops that actually improve in flavor after a frost β€” kale, beets, carrots β€” are genuine assets here.

Michigan soils vary widely: the sandy loams of the west coast fruit belt drain fast and warm early, while heavier clay soils in the southeast hold moisture but compact easily. Root crops like carrots and beets thrive where soil has been loosened and amended. The state's reliable summer rainfall reduces irrigation pressure for most crops, though consistent moisture matters most during germination and head formation.

At a glance

CropTypeDays to harvestSunHeatFrostLevel
Pea Cool 55–70 days Full β€” βœ“ Easy
Broccoli Cool 60–90 days Full β€” βœ“ Moderate
Cabbage Cool 60–100 days Full β€” βœ“ Moderate
Cauliflower Cool 60–100 days Full β€” βœ“ Hard
Kale Cool 50–65 days Full β€” βœ“ Easy
Lettuce Cool 30–60 days Part β€” βœ“ Easy
Spinach Cool 35–50 days Part β€” βœ“ Easy
Swiss chard Cool 50–60 days Full βœ“ βœ“ Easy
Carrot Cool 60–80 days Full β€” βœ“ Moderate
Beet Cool 50–70 days Full βœ“ βœ“ Easy
Radish Cool 25–35 days Part β€” βœ“ Easy
Onion Cool 90–120 days Full β€” βœ“ Moderate
Garlic Cool 240–270 days Full β€” βœ“ Easy
Strawberry Cool 90–110 days Full β€” βœ“ Moderate

Why each one works

01

Pea

Cool-season 55–70 days

Peas are the opening act of the Michigan garden season β€” direct sow as soon as soil reaches 40Β°F, often late March in zone 6b, and they'll be done before summer heat triggers bolting. Michigan's slow spring warm-up gives vines time to set a heavy pod load before temperatures force them into decline. Grow 'Sugar Snap' on 5-foot trellises and expect harvest by late May to early June before you need that bed for warm-season crops.

Full pea growing guide β†’
02

Broccoli

Cool-season 60–90 days

Michigan's cool, moist springs are nearly ideal for broccoli, which needs consistent temperatures in the 60sΒ°F to form dense, tight heads. Start transplants indoors in early March, set out after last frost, and you'll cut central heads in June; side shoots continue producing for weeks. For a second crop, transplant again in late July for heads that mature in September's cool air β€” fall-grown Michigan broccoli is noticeably sweeter than spring.

Full broccoli growing guide β†’
03

Cabbage

Cool-season 60–100 days

Cabbage tolerates Michigan's late-spring cold snaps far better than most crops and benefits from the long, mild spring days that build big, dense heads. Start indoors 6–8 weeks before your last frost date, harden off for a week, and transplant out in mid-April in southern Michigan. 'Early Jersey Wakefield' matures in 63 days for a reliable June harvest; for fall storage cabbages, transplant 'Storage No. 4' in late July for October harvest before hard freeze.

Full cabbage growing guide β†’
04

Cauliflower

Cool-season 60–100 days

Cauliflower is the most temperature-sensitive of Michigan's cool-season crops β€” a week of 80Β°F weather during head development causes loose, ricey curds. Fall planting in Michigan largely solves this: transplant in late July so heads develop entirely in August–September when temps drop reliably into the 60s. When the curd reaches softball size, gather outer leaves and secure them over the head with a rubber band to blanch it white over the following 7–10 days.

Full cauliflower growing guide β†’
05

Kale

Cool-season 50–65 days

Kale may be Michigan's most forgiving vegetable β€” it tolerates temperatures from 20Β°F to 85Β°F without bolting and improves dramatically in flavor after the first frost converts starches to sugars. Direct sow or transplant in early spring for summer harvests, then again in July for fall crops that can be picked well into November in southern Michigan. 'Lacinato' (dinosaur kale) holds its texture better than curly types after frost and is particularly productive through Michigan's long fall shoulder season.

Full kale growing guide β†’
06

Lettuce

Cool-season 30–60 days

Lettuce's 30–60 day window from seed to harvest is a near-perfect match for Michigan's spring cool period before June heat triggers bolting. Sow direct in mid-April under row cover for protection against late frosts, then succession-plant every two weeks through May for continuous harvest. Choose bolt-resistant varieties like 'Nevada' or 'Jericho' for late-spring plantings, and reserve shaded spots under taller crops for summer lettuce that pushes into July.

Full lettuce growing guide β†’
07

Spinach

Cool-season 35–50 days

Spinach germinates in soil as cold as 40Β°F, making it the first seed Michigan gardeners can direct-sow β€” sometimes in early April when snow still lingers on the edges of beds. It completes its entire life cycle in the cool window before summer, then rebounds in fall when planted in late August for harvests through October or even November under a frost cloth. 'Bloomsdale Long Standing' resists bolting better than flat-leaf types and holds well during Michigan's occasionally warm May stretches.

Full spinach growing guide β†’
08

Swiss chard

Cool-season 50–60 days

Swiss chard is uniquely valuable in Michigan because it bridges both cool and warm seasons β€” frost-hardy enough to start in April, heat-tolerant enough to produce through July and August, and still standing after October frosts. Unlike most greens, it doesn't bolt in summer, giving Michigan gardeners a continuous leafy green harvest across the entire season. Plant 'Bright Lights' in mid-April and harvest outer leaves continuously; the same planting will still produce in October after nights hit 28Β°F.

Full swiss chard growing guide β†’
09

Carrot

Cool-season 60–80 days

Michigan's west coast sandy loams are among the best carrot soils in the Great Lakes region β€” loose, deep, and well-drained, allowing roots to grow straight without forking. Sow seeds 3–4 weeks before last frost, keeping the seedbed consistently moist until germination (10–14 days); a thin layer of vermiculite over the row helps retain moisture and prevent crusting. For heavy clay soils common in southeast Michigan, grow short-rooted types like 'Chantenay' or 'Danvers Half Long' that don't need 12 inches of depth.

Full carrot growing guide β†’
10

Beet

Cool-season 50–70 days

Beets are an ideal Michigan spring crop: they tolerate frost, germinate quickly at 50Β°F, and reach harvest in 50–70 days before summer heat arrives. Each beet 'seed' is actually a cluster of 2–3 seeds, so thin aggressively to 3 inches apart once seedlings are 2 inches tall β€” skipping this step is the single most common reason for disappointing yields. Plant 'Detroit Dark Red' for reliable roots, and don't overlook the greens, which are at their most tender in Michigan's cool spring air.

Full beet growing guide β†’
11

Radish

Cool-season 25–35 days

Radishes mature in just 25–35 days, making them one of the few vegetables Michigan gardeners can plant and harvest twice before summer: once in April and again in a second sowing in late August. They also serve as a row marker for slow-germinating carrots and parsnips β€” sow radish seeds in the same furrow, and they'll mark the row and be pulled before they crowd the main crop. 'Cherry Belle' and 'French Breakfast' are reliable performers; avoid leaving them in the ground past maturity in Michigan's warm June or they turn pithy and sharp.

Full radish growing guide β†’
12

Onion

Cool-season 90–120 days

Michigan's cool springs and long summer days above 45Β°N latitude trigger bulb formation in long-day onion varieties, which require 14–16 hours of daylight β€” exactly what Michigan delivers from June onward. Plant sets in early April as soon as soil is workable, 1 inch deep and 4 inches apart; they'll shrug off frosts that would kill transplanted tomatoes. 'Copra' is the standard Michigan storage onion, curing to a papery skin by late July and storing through winter in a cool basement.

Full onion growing guide β†’
13

Garlic

Cool-season 240–270 days

Garlic planted in October uses Michigan's cold winter to vernalize β€” the cold period that triggers large bulb development β€” then emerges in early April and is ready to harvest in July when tops begin to brown. Hardneck varieties like 'Music' and 'German Red' are best suited to Michigan's cold winters (zone 6 minimum temps of -10Β°F are well within hardneck tolerance) and produce large, flavorful cloves. Mulch beds with 4–6 inches of straw after planting to moderate freeze-thaw cycles that can heave garlic cloves out of the ground.

Full garlic growing guide β†’
14

Strawberry

Cool-season 90–110 days

Michigan is a nationally significant strawberry-producing state, and its climate β€” cold winters for dormancy, cool spring pollination weather, and warm summer ripening β€” produces some of the most flavorful June-bearing fruit in the country. Plant certified disease-free crowns in spring, remove the first year's blossoms to build root mass, and harvest a full crop the following June. 'Honeoye' ripens early and handles Michigan's variable spring weather, while 'Jewel' peaks in mid-June with superior flavor; both are reliably winter-hardy to zone 4.

Full strawberry growing guide β†’

Frequently asked questions

When should I start seeds indoors for Michigan's spring garden?

For most of southern Michigan (zone 6b), count back from a May 10–15 last frost date: start broccoli, cabbage, and cauliflower 6–8 weeks prior (late February to early March) and lettuce 4–6 weeks prior. In northern Michigan or the Upper Peninsula, push everything back 2–3 weeks to account for last frost dates that can fall in late May.

Can I plant a second cool-season garden in fall in Michigan?

Yes, and fall is often more productive than spring because soil is already warm for fast germination and pest pressure drops significantly after August. Count back from your first fall frost date (typically mid-October in southern Michigan): broccoli and cabbage need 10–12 weeks, so transplant by late July; kale, beets, and spinach need 6–8 weeks, so direct sow in early to mid-August.

How do I protect cool-season crops from Michigan's unpredictable late-spring frosts?

Row cover fabric (floating row cover rated to 28Β°F) is the single most useful tool for Michigan spring gardening β€” it can buy you 4–6Β°F of frost protection and lets you plant 2–3 weeks earlier than unprotected soil. Keep it on hand through Memorial Day even in southern Michigan, as a late frost in early May is common enough to catch gardeners off guard. Cloches and cold frames work for smaller plantings of lettuce and spinach.

Why does my broccoli form loose, yellowing heads instead of tight green ones?

Loose or ricey broccoli in Michigan is almost always caused by temperatures above 80Β°F during head development, which accelerates the plant into premature flowering. This happens most often to spring-planted broccoli that matures in late June heat. The fix is to shift to fall production β€” transplant in late July so heads develop entirely in August and September when Michigan temperatures reliably cooperate.