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Don’t Be Tempted By the Warm Weekend Forecast, Gardeners
Don’t Be Tempted By the Warm Weekend Forecast, Gardeners-February 2024
Feb 16, 2026 9:33 PM

Mid-to-late May is the safest bet for most planting in Chicago. (Lukas / Pexels)Mid-to-late May is the safest bet for most planting in Chicago. (Lukas / Pexels)

About this time of year, gardeners’ fingers start to get itchy.

The weekend warm-up in the forecast all but dares people to pick up their trowels and commence the big spring dig. It’s easy to forget the cruelest April Fool’s joke: The season’s last frost is likely several weeks away, meaning it’s far too early to put most plants in the ground.

Mid-to-late May is the safest bet for planting the majority of annuals, as well as edibles such as tomato, pepper and squash seedlings.

Still, there’s enough maintenance and prep work, both for floral and vegetable gardens, to keep hands busy.

Month-by-month gardening guides from both theChicago Botanic Gardenand theMorton Arboretumhave lengthy to-do lists for gardeners to check off in April.

Recommended tasks include: picking up debrisleft over from the fall and winter*; replenishing mulch; deadheading spring bloomers when they’ve finished flowering; dividing summer- and fall-blooming perennials when they’ve reached 4 to 6 inches; and preparing planting beds by working in compost and other organic matter.

For intrepid cool weather gardeners, someannuals can tolerate a light frost. According to the Chicago Botanic Garden, these include snapdragons, sweet peas, forget-me-nots and pansies, among others.Crops that don't mind the coldinclude asparagus, spinach, peas and radish. In general, these “cold-hardy” plants can go in the ground two to four weeks before the expected final frost, which in Chicago means mid-April at the earliest.

Seedlings grown indoors or a greenhouse should be “hardened” — gradually exposed to the outdoors — before being transplanted.

*Read how to properly dispose of yard waste.

Contact Patty Wetli:@pattywetli| (773) 509-5623 |[email protected]

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