USDA Zone 1 planting calendar
When to plant garlic in USDA zone 1
Sowing, transplant, and harvest dates calibrated to zone 1's 60-day season (Interior Alaska (Fairbanks region)).
Key dates for garlic in zone 1
| Stage | When | Anchor |
|---|---|---|
| Plant cloves outdoors | early July — mid-July (about 35 days before first fall frost) | 35 days before first fall frost (mid-August) |
| First harvest (estimate) | mid-March of the following year | ~240 days from autumn planting |
Dates are zone-wide averages. Local microclimates (south-facing slopes, urban heat, lakeside warmth, elevation) can shift the planting window by 1-2 weeks within the same zone.
Why this timing works for zone 1
Zone 1 has average annual minimum temperatures of -60 to -50°F and a 60-day frost-free window from mid-June to mid-August. Garlic need a cold period to bulb properly. Plant cloves in autumn so roots establish before the ground freezes, then they overwinter dormant and break growth in spring. Zone 1 delivers enough chill hours for hardneck varieties.
Garlic is the unusual one — plant cloves in autumn (4-6 weeks before the first hard fall frost) so they put down roots before winter, then break dormancy in spring and bulb up over the long days of early summer. Cold-winter zones grow hardneck varieties; mild-winter zones do better with softneck.
Quick-grow guide
- Sun: Full sun — 6+ hours direct.
- Soil temperature for germination: Soil 10-15 °C (50-60 °F) at planting.
- Spacing: 4-6 inches (10-15 cm) between plants.
- Days to harvest from autumn planting: ~240 days.
- Mulch heavily (10-15 cm of straw or shredded leaves) once the ground starts to freeze.
Common mistakes — zone 1 × garlic
- Planting too late: zone 1 winters arrive fast — get cloves in 5-6 weeks before frost so roots establish before the ground freezes solid.
- Skipping winter mulch — without 10-15 cm of straw or shredded-leaf cover, freeze-thaw cycles can heave cloves out of the soil.
Source and methodology
Frost-date averages from NOAA Climate Data Online within each USDA hardiness zone. Hardiness zone boundaries from the USDA Plant Hardiness Zone Map (2023). Crop timing offsets calibrated against US Cooperative Extension Service publications (UNL, UMN, NC State, Texas A&M, UF/IFAS) and cross-checked against the RHS sowing calendar for en-GB readers. Curated by the Growli editorial team.
Keep going
- How to grow garlic — full guide
- USDA Zone 1 — frost dates and what else to plant
- All 13 USDA hardiness zones