Countdown to Frost
When will my garden really start producing? I can’t wait!
That’s a common feeling among gardeners today. First, we got off to a slow start due to the record cold temperatures this spring. Now our crops are flowering, but fruit setting has been uneven due to the extreme heat. Temperatures in the high 80s scorched the pollen of many flowers, preventing them from setting fruits.
Cucumber and squash vines have lots of flowers—but few fruits. Baby melons can be found on the vine—but will they ripen in time?
Bell pepper blossoms were burned. Now gardeners are waiting for their next flush of flowers.
Other gardeners are starting to see red tomatoes in their garden, only to discover these first fruits were ruined by blossom end rot.
Will they ever get a full-sized red, ripe tomato before frost?
Start by checking your first expected frost date (see map). Now check the table below to see the expected days required from pollination to harvest.
Looking ahead to this fall, the National Weather Service sees no strong trends for temperatures in North Dakota from August to October 2018. It’s just as likely that we will have “below normal” as “above normal” temperatures.
Let’s hope for a late frost!
Days from pollination to harvest under warm growing conditions. Source: Midwest Vegetable Production Guide for Commercial Growers 2018.
Crop | Days |
---|---|
Beans | 7–18 |
Cantaloupe | 40–50 |
Corn (from 50% silking) | 18–23 |
Cucumber, pickling | 4–5 |
Cucumber, slicing | 15–18 |
Eggplant | 25–40 |
Okra | 4–6 |
Pepper (green bell) | 45–55 |
Pepper (red bell) | 60–70 |
Pumpkin (jack-o’-lantern) | 60–90 |
Squash, summer zucchini | 3–4 |
Squash, winter acorn | 55–60 |
Squash, winter butternut | 60–70 |
Tomato (mature green) | 34–45 |
Tomato (red ripe) | 45–60 |
Watermelon | 40–50 |
Written by Tom Kalb, Extension Horticulturist, North Dakota State University.
North Dakota State Climate Office. 2018. Accessed online.
Purdue University. 2018. Midwest Vegetable Production Guide for Commercial Growers 2018. Page 33.