What to Plant in January — Zone 6

One of the most popular gardening zones with a generous season for warm and cool-season crops alike.

Frost-Free: April 30 – Oct 15 USDA Zone 6

Quick Answer

In zone 6 during January, the heart of winter — a time for planning, ordering seeds, and starting your earliest transplants under grow lights. Your key tasks this month: order seeds and map out garden beds, start onions and leeks indoors under lights, and prune dormant fruit trees and grape vines.

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January Gardening Tasks for Zone 6

January is the heart of winter — a time for planning, ordering seeds, and starting your earliest transplants under grow lights. Zone 6 has a frost-free window from April 30 – Oct 15, which shapes what you can plant and when. Here is your complete task list:

1. Order seeds and map out garden beds
2. Start onions and leeks indoors under lights
3. Prune dormant fruit trees and grape vines

Plant Guides for This Month

These plants are mentioned in your January tasks. Read their full growing guides for detailed planting instructions:

Helpful Guides for January

These gardening guides are especially useful this time of year:

Frequently Asked Questions

What should I plant in January in zone 6?

In zone 6 during January, focus on: Order seeds and map out garden beds. Start onions and leeks indoors under lights. Prune dormant fruit trees and grape vines. The frost-free period for zone 6 is April 30 – Oct 15.

Is it too late to plant in January in zone 6?

January is a productive month in zone 6. One of the most popular gardening zones with a generous season for warm and cool-season crops alike. Check each crop's days to maturity against your remaining frost-free window (April 30 – Oct 15).

What is USDA zone 6?

USDA Zone 6 has a frost-free growing season from approximately April 30 – Oct 15. One of the most popular gardening zones with a generous season for warm and cool-season crops alike.

Browse All Months — Zone 6

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