RHS H7 UK planting calendar
When to plant sweet potatoes in RHS H7 (UK)
Sowing, planting, and harvest dates calibrated to H7's 90-day UK season (High Scottish mountains, exposed glens, alpine gardens above 500 m. A tiny fraction of UK gardens experience true H7 conditions.).
Key dates for sweet potatoes at RHS H7
| Stage | When | Anchor |
|---|---|---|
| Indoor seed start | early May (4 May) | 6 weeks before last frost |
| Outdoor transplant | early July (6 July) | 21 days after last frost (mid-June) |
| First harvest (estimate) | mid-October (19 October) | ~105 days from transplant |
Dates are typical for the regions H7 describes (High Scottish mountains, exposed glens, alpine gardens above 500 m. A tiny fraction of UK gardens experience true H7 conditions.). UK frost pockets, urban heat, and coastal moderation can shift the planting window by 1-2 weeks within the same rating band. Always cross-check against your local Met Office station for current conditions.
Why this timing works at H7
H7 describes UK gardens with winter minima of minimum below -20 °C. Last spring frost typically passes mid-June; first autumn frost arrives early September, giving about 90 frost-free days. Sweet potatoes are tender — they need soil above 10 °C to grow and stop setting fruit when night temperatures drop below 10 °C. At H7 that means transplant after the last spring frost (mid-June) and pull plants when autumn cools (early September).
Sweet potatoes are extremely frost-tender and demand warm soil — do not transplant slips until soil temperature at 4-inch depth holds at 18 °C (65 °F) or above, typically 3 weeks after the last spring frost. Short-season zones (z5-6) should start slips indoors under lights 5-6 weeks early to ensure 100-120 frost-free days. Avoid zones 3-4 without a floating row cover season-extension strategy; in z9-11 slips can go out as early as late March.
UK-specific tips for H7
- H7 territory — high Scottish mountains, Cairngorm fringe, Caithness — gives a 90-day frost-free window. sweet potatoes are realistic only with full season-extension kit: polytunnel, fleece, and short-season cultivars.
- Wind chill is the dominant stress — even a healthy plant fails if it sits in a constant 30 mph gale. Walled or netted shelters change what is possible more than any temperature change.
- Soil warmth lags air temperature by 3-4 weeks at H7 elevations — black plastic mulch through April is the difference between a crop and a failure.
- Watch the autumn equinox carefully — once day length drops below 12 hours, most warm-season crops stop ripening regardless of temperature. Pick green and ripen indoors.
Quick-grow guide
- Sun: Full sun — 6-8 hours direct.
- Soil temperature for germination: Soil 18-24 °C (65-75 °F) for slip rooting.
- Spacing: 12-18 inches (30-45 cm).
- Days to harvest from transplant: ~105 days.
- Wait until soil reaches 10-12 °C before transplanting outdoors — cold UK soils stall tender crops for weeks.
Common mistakes — H7 × sweet potatoes
- Treating UK climate like the US zone 5: although temperature minima match, UK summers are cooler, wetter, and cloudier. Add 1-2 weeks to days-to-harvest figures from US sources.
- Sowing into cold wet soil: UK spring soil holds water longer than equivalent US zones. Wait for soil to dry enough to crumble in your hand before sowing.
Source and methodology
RHS hardiness rating thresholds from the official RHS reference. Typical frost-date averages from Met Office regional climate summaries for the geographies H7describes. Crop timing offsets calibrated against UK extension references (RHS sowing calendar, Garden Organic, James Wong's UK growing tables) and cross-checked against US Cooperative Extension Service publications. For American readers cross-referencing, RHS H7 is roughly equivalent to USDA zone 5. Curated by the Growli editorial team.
Keep going
- How to grow sweet potatoes — full guide
- RHS H7 — typical regions and what else to plant
- All RHS hardiness ratings (H1a-H7)
- USDA hardiness zones — for cross-reference with US sources
- Fungus gnats in UK houseplants — guide