Waiting Until After Easter to Plant

 Why This Benchmark Belongs in the Compost Pile
📝 Opinion | by Guy Saldiveri | March 9, 2026

This is another opinion that will probably irritate a few folks. That’s not the goal though. My goal—as always—is to give you the most accurate and reliable information I can, even when it bumps up against tradition.

I've said before: I don’t sow seeds or set out starts in February. I usually treat February and March as cleanup months: clearing beds, prepping soil, getting everything ready for the year. And most years, I stick to that. The times I don’t? Those are the times when science says it’s safe to take the chance.

I don’t follow folklore.

I don’t follow “grandma said.”

And I definitely don’t follow the Farmer’s Almanac, which—let’s be honest—is just folklore with better marketing.

What do I use? Let's take a closer look.

It's not Easter, nor is it Good Friday. It's not any holiday or tradition that has absolutely nothing to do with meteorology. I use local weather patterns and solid 10‑day forecasts from trusted sources.

Why Easter Is a Terrible Benchmark

Easter is based on a specific astronomical formula: it’s the first Sunday after the first full moon on or after the church‑defined date of the vernal equinox (March 21).

That means Easter can fall anywhere from March 22 to April 25.

Read that again:
March 22 to April 25
a full five‑week window

And that five‑week window straddles the end of winter and the beginning of spring—the most volatile, unpredictable stretch of the entire year. A lot can happen in that span, and a lot usually does.

So basing your planting date on Easter is like rolling the dice.

One year you hit a lucky 7.
The next year you roll snake eyes.

Because of the time of year, you might wind up coming out ahead by planting after Easter. Waiting could get you past those cold fronts—IF Easter falls late enough. At the same time, though, winter might be done mid-March, Easter might be falling late April, and you are missing almost five weeks of planting and growing time. 

Does this really make sense to you? I know it doesn't to me.

Let me ask a serious question here. If you take out the Easter reference entirely—if Easter actually fell sometime in September, what would you do in March or April? What would you recommend someone else do then?

That is what you should do and recommend every year—ignore the fact that Easter just happens to be folded into the equation, even though it has no meteorological relevance.

Now, trust me, I fully admit I've been burned before. I've sown seed and set out starts too early in the past—only to lose them or have to drag them in and out of the house. I've lost many plants over the years due to late frosts, and we do have a very long season. 

That in itself is a reason—and a good one—for waiting until the last week in March or the first in April to get started. 

Notice how I phrased that—March–April—not Easter… That’s basing things on climatology, current weather patterns, and trusted long‑range forecasts. 

That's science—not folklore. 

If you prefer, using the other plants in the area as a guide can also be very useful. Waiting for dandelions to pop up, clover to flower, pecan trees to start budding out. These are nature's clues that the weather is right. Things are warming up, soil is the right temperature, it's time for everything to wake up.  Sadly, even then at times, it's hit or miss. 

There's another interesting point I need to bring up here. Many of these debates on when to start plants occur in gardening groups that span the entire state or even multiple states. Local weather is based on local areas. It's also based on LATITUDE. That means what I can do on the Gulf Coast doesn't carry over to what you have to do up in Memphis. There is a lot of ground between those two areas and a lot of difference in temperature and patterns. Even if a late front starts barreling down, Jackson might get a frost while Gulfport basks in 75° weather… 

What's the best baseline to go by?

wait until at least the first or second week in March
nighttime lows consistently above 45°
soil temps above 55° for warm-season crops
no frost risk in the 10‑day forecast—and remember, frost happens well above freezing

I can't help but date myself here and bring back a memory of a very old song by the 5th dimension…

"When the moon is in the seventh house, and Jupiter aligns with Mars, then peace will guide the planets, and love will steer the stars…"

Yeah, I actually found that fitting…

No one has a crystal ball. Even using the above guidelines can mean failure, but using a large moving window as your target date is—in my opinion—just begging for disaster.

Happy Gardening 🌱

Comments

  1. Good advice here. I prefer this logic to Easter. As you pointed out Easter can span anytime over a 5 week period. Thanks for the logical information 👍

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment