Louisiana planting calendar
When to plant cantaloupe in Louisiana — sow, transplant & harvest dates
Louisiana is mostly USDA zone 9a (range 8a-9b). Dates below are derived from cantaloupe's frost tolerance and Louisiana's frost window — not generic national averages.
Cantaloupe planting timetable for Louisiana
| Stage | When in Louisiana | Anchor |
|---|---|---|
| Start seeds indoors (spring crop) | late February (February 22) | 3 weeks before the last frost (mid-March) |
| Transplant outside (spring crop) | late March (March 29) | 14 days after the last frost (mid-March) |
| Spring-crop harvest | mid-June onward, before peak summer heat | 80-day crop — finishes before mid-summer |
| Plant the fall crop | mid-August (August 13) — once the worst heat breaks | ~94 days before the first fall frost (mid-November) |
| Fall-crop harvest | early November into early winter | 80-day crop — often the more productive of the two |
Dates are state-wide averages for the dominant zone. Local microclimates — elevation, urban heat, coastal moderation — can shift the window by 1-2 weeks. Use the frost-date calculator for a date tuned to your town.
Why Louisiana's climate shifts the cantaloupe dates
Louisiana's long hot summer shuts down fruit set, so locals run two short crops — a spring planting and a fall planting — around a deliberate mid-summer pause, instead of one long northern-style season. Louisiana is hot, humid, and subtropical with a very long season. Drainage, heat, and humidity drive plant choice far more than cold.
Cantaloupe (muskmelon) is one of the most heat-demanding cucurbits — soil temperature must reach 21 °C (70 °F) and night air temperatures should stay consistently above 15 °C before transplanting. Short-season zones 3-5 should start indoors 2-3 weeks early and use black plastic mulch to boost soil heat. Fruits ripen only in warm, dry conditions; humid climates favor powdery mildew and fruit rot, so zones 8-10 with hot summers are ideal. Withhold irrigation in the final 1-2 weeks before harvest to concentrate sugars.
Frost-risk note
A light frost in the northern parishes near Shreveport (zone 8a) can clip an early spring planting; the bigger risk is mid-summer heat sterilising flowers.
Regional variation within Louisiana
the Gulf Coast and New Orleans (zone 9b) can start the spring crop weeks earlier and may garden almost year-round; the northern parishes near Shreveport (zone 8a) runs a shorter, more northern-style single season.
- New Orleans — USDA zone 9b
- Baton Rouge — USDA zone 9a
- Shreveport — USDA zone 8b
- Lafayette — USDA zone 9a
What else to plant in Louisiana around then
Pair the spring slot with other heat-lovers (peppers, squash, beans); use the cool October–February window for greens and brassicas.
Quick-grow guide
- Sun: Full sun — 6-8 hours direct.
- Soil temperature for germination: 24-32 °C (75-90 °F).
- Spacing: 36-48 inches (90-120 cm) between plants.
- Days to harvest: ~80 days from planting out.
Frequently asked questions
When is the best time to plant cantaloupe in Louisiana?
In Louisiana (mostly USDA zone 9a), sow cantaloupe indoors around late February, set the spring crop out late March, harvest before peak summer heat, then plant a second crop mid-August for an autumn harvest. Avoid mid-summer. Cantaloupe are frost-tender — a single light frost kills seedlings, so they only go outside once frost danger has fully passed and the soil is warm.
What USDA zone is Louisiana?
Most of Louisiana sits in USDA hardiness zone 9a, with the state spanning roughly 8a-9b from the northern parishes near Shreveport (zone 8a) to the Gulf Coast and New Orleans (zone 9b). The last spring frost averages mid-March and the first fall frost mid-November.
Can you grow cantaloupe in Louisiana?
Yes. Louisiana's dominant zone 9a supports cantaloupe — the key is timing. Cantaloupe are frost-tender — a single light frost kills seedlings, so they only go outside once frost danger has fully passed and the soil is warm.
Does the planting date change across Louisiana?
the Gulf Coast and New Orleans (zone 9b) can start the spring crop weeks earlier and may garden almost year-round; the northern parishes near Shreveport (zone 8a) runs a shorter, more northern-style single season.
What else can I plant in Louisiana around the same time?
Pair the spring slot with other heat-lovers (peppers, squash, beans); use the cool October–February window for greens and brassicas.
Source and methodology
State zone spans from the USDA Plant Hardiness Zone Map (2023); frost-date averages from NOAA Climate Data Online. Hot-state two-season timing cross-checked against the UF/IFAS Florida Gardening Calendar and the University of Arizona Cooperative Extension planting calendar. Curated by the Growli editorial team.
Keep going
- How to grow cantaloupe — full guide
- USDA zone 9 — frost dates and what else to plant
- Average frost dates by zone
- Frost-date calculator
- Month-by-month planting calendar
- When to plant cantaloupe in every US state
Same crop, nearby states (Southeast)
- When to plant cantaloupe in Mississippi
- When to plant cantaloupe in North Carolina
- When to plant cantaloupe in South Carolina
- When to plant cantaloupe in Tennessee
- When to plant cantaloupe in Virginia
- When to plant cantaloupe in West Virginia
- When to plant cantaloupe in Alabama
- When to plant cantaloupe in Arkansas