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Growing guide ยท Washington

Best Vegetables to Grow in Washington

Washington's long, cool springs and mild winters make it one of the best states in the country for cool-season vegetables. Peas, kale, and broccoli are standout performers โ€” plant them early and you'll harvest before summer heat arrives.

Temperate climateUSDA zone 814 crops

Washington's temperate zone 8 climate is defined by mild, wet winters and a prolonged cool spring that stretches well into June west of the Cascades. That cool shoulder season โ€” roughly March through June and again September through November โ€” is prime time for a long list of vegetables that struggle in hotter climates. Gardeners in the Puget Sound region often get two full cool-season windows per year.

The challenge in western Washington is the opposite of most U.S. gardens: not too little moisture, but too much cloud cover and too few warm days for heat-loving crops. Cool-season vegetables, however, thrive in exactly these conditions. Many can be started outdoors earlier than gardeners elsewhere dare, and fall harvests often continue well past first frost.

Eastern Washington operates more like a continental climate โ€” colder winters and hotter, drier summers โ€” but spring and fall still offer reliable cool-season windows. Across the state, the smart move is to lean into what the climate gives you: start cool-season crops aggressively in early spring, and plan a second succession for late summer planting to harvest into November.

At a glance

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

Why each one works

01

Pea

Cool-season 55โ€“70 days

Peas are practically Washington's state vegetable in spirit โ€” the cool, moist springs on both sides of the Cascades suit them perfectly. Direct sow as soon as soil reaches 40ยฐF, which in western Washington can be late February or early March. Choose a shelling variety like 'Cascadia' snap pea and get seeds in the ground before soils warm past 70ยฐF, which causes germination to stall.

Full pea growing guide โ†’
02

Broccoli

Cool-season 60โ€“90 days

Broccoli's long harvest window (60โ€“90 days) fits neatly inside Washington's extended spring before temperatures climb. Start transplants indoors in late January and set out in March for a June harvest, or direct sow in July for a fall crop that sweetens after light frost. 'Belstar' and 'Green Magic' are reliable performers in the maritime climate's variable light.

Full broccoli growing guide โ†’
03

Cabbage

Cool-season 60โ€“100 days

Cabbage handles Washington's wet springs without the rot problems it develops in warmer, humid climates. It tolerates the region's frequent light frosts and can be transplanted out in March under a cloche. For fall crops, start seeds in mid-July โ€” heads maturing in October and November develop excellent sweetness after they experience a few frosts.

Full cabbage growing guide โ†’
04

Cauliflower

Cool-season 60โ€“100 days

Cauliflower is the most temperature-sensitive brassica, but Washington's naturally cool summers keep it from buttoning prematurely โ€” a common problem in warmer climates. The key is steady, cool growth from transplant to harvest; avoid stressing plants with irregular watering. Blanch heads by tying outer leaves over the curd when they reach golf ball size to prevent yellowing in the region's variable sun.

Full cauliflower growing guide โ†’
05

Kale

Cool-season 50โ€“65 days

Kale is exceptionally well adapted to Washington and can effectively be grown as a perennial in mild western Washington winters, producing harvests nearly year-round. 'Winterbor' and 'Red Russian' varieties withstand hard freezes and taste best after frost converts starches to sugars. Sow a second planting in August to ensure vigorous growth through the wet winter months.

Full kale growing guide โ†’
06

Lettuce

Cool-season 30โ€“60 days

Washington's cool, overcast springs are ideal for lettuce, preventing the bolting that plagues gardeners in sunnier climates. Direct sow or transplant as early as March under row cover, then sow successions every three weeks through May and again in August. Loose-leaf types like 'Black Seeded Simpson' and butterheads perform best in the low-light conditions common to Puget Sound gardens.

Full lettuce growing guide โ†’
07

Spinach

Cool-season 35โ€“50 days

Spinach thrives in Washington's cool, moist conditions and can be sown in February under cover for harvests by April โ€” weeks ahead of most U.S. gardens. It's one of the few crops that overwinters reliably west of the Cascades; sow in September and protect with a cold frame for a late winter harvest. 'Tyee' and 'Olympia' are bolt-resistant varieties suited to the region's variable day length.

Full spinach growing guide โ†’
08

Swiss chard

Cool-season 50โ€“60 days

Swiss chard bridges Washington's cool and warm seasons better than almost any other vegetable โ€” frost-hardy in spring and fall, and tolerant of the moderate summer heat that does arrive. It performs double duty as a near year-round producer in western Washington, often surviving mild winters with minimal protection. Sow in April and harvest outer leaves continuously; plants regularly last 18 months before bolting.

Full swiss chard growing guide โ†’
09

Carrot

Cool-season 60โ€“80 days

Washington's deep, cool soils produce excellent carrots, especially in the Skagit and Willamette valleys. Sow from March through July for a continuous harvest; fall and overwintered carrots left in the ground develop exceptional sweetness as cold converts starches to sugars. Amend heavy clay soils common in western Washington with sand or compost to prevent forking โ€” short Chantenay or Danvers types handle imperfect soil better than long Imperator varieties.

Full carrot growing guide โ†’
10

Beet

Cool-season 50โ€“70 days

Beets grow steadily through Washington's cool springs and tolerate light frost at both ends of the season, making them a reliable two-season crop. Direct sow in March or April for summer harvest and again in late July for fall roots. Each 'seed' is actually a cluster of 2โ€“3 seeds, so thin to 3-inch spacing early to avoid stunted roots โ€” this single step has the biggest impact on beet yield in the home garden.

Full beet growing guide โ†’
11

Radish

Cool-season 25โ€“35 days

Radishes are the fastest payoff in a Washington spring garden, maturing in as few as 25 days when soil temperatures are in the 50โ€“65ยฐF range. Sow every two weeks from March through May and again in September for fall harvest; skip midsummer sowings when bolting is rapid. Use them as row markers between slower-germinating crops like carrots โ€” by the time you pull the radishes, the carrots need the space.

Full radish growing guide โ†’
12

Onion

Cool-season 90โ€“120 days

Washington's long summer days โ€” over 15 hours at the summer solstice โ€” trigger bulbing in long-day onion varieties, which is exactly what the region requires. Start from transplants or sets in March to give bulbs the full growing season before days shorten in August. 'Walla Walla Sweet,' developed in eastern Washington, is the region's signature variety and performs exceptionally well across the state.

Full onion growing guide โ†’
13

Garlic

Cool-season 240โ€“270 days

Garlic is planted in October in Washington and overwinters in the ground, producing scapes in June and cured bulbs by late July โ€” a 9-month cycle that fits the region's rhythm perfectly. Hardneck varieties like 'Music' or 'Chesnok Red' suit western Washington's mild winters and outperform softneck types in cool, maritime conditions. Mulch with straw after planting to moderate soil temperature through the wet winter months.

Full garlic growing guide โ†’
14

Strawberry

Cool-season 90โ€“110 days

June-bearing strawberries align perfectly with Washington's climate, producing their main crop as the weather transitions from cool spring to early summer โ€” the sweetest conditions for berry development. 'Quinault,' 'Totem,' and 'Hood' are Pacific Northwest varieties bred for the region's specific day length and disease pressure. Plant bare-root crowns in March and remove the first season's flowers to build strong root systems for larger yields in year two.

Full strawberry growing guide โ†’

Frequently asked questions

When should I start cool-season vegetables in western Washington?

Most cool-season crops can go in the ground from late February through March in western Washington, often 4โ€“6 weeks earlier than inland gardeners. Use a cloche or row cover to extend that window another 2โ€“3 weeks if late frosts are forecast. The goal is to have plants established and growing before the longest days of summer trigger bolting in crops like lettuce and spinach.

Can I grow vegetables year-round in Washington?

In western Washington's mild maritime climate, yes โ€” with the right crops. Kale, chard, overwintered spinach, and garlic carry through most winters without protection, and leeks and Brussels sprouts often produce well into January. A cold frame or low tunnel expands the winter garden considerably and makes year-round harvests realistic even in wetter, colder years.

Why do my brassicas get eaten every year in Washington?

Cabbage worms, slugs, and aphids are the main brassica pests in Washington's moist climate. Cover transplants with floating row cover immediately after planting and leave it on through the season to exclude cabbage white butterflies. For slugs, iron phosphate bait (safe around pets and wildlife) applied after rain is more effective than diatomite in Washington's consistently damp conditions.

Does eastern Washington have a different planting schedule than western Washington?

Yes, significantly. Eastern Washington experiences colder winters and hotter summers, so spring planting is delayed by 2โ€“4 weeks compared to the Puget Sound region โ€” aim for April transplants rather than March. The upside is more reliable summer warmth and lower disease pressure from fungal issues that plague the wetter west side. Fall planting windows are similar across the state, with September being the key month for second successions.