Zone 5 · Flowers & Companions Growing Guide

When to Plant Nasturtium
in Zone 5

Fully edible -- flowers, leaves, and seeds. Acts as a trap crop for aphids, drawing them away from vegetables. Self-seeds prolifically and thrives on neglect.

Plant window opens
Apr 22
Last chance to plant
Jun 3
Last frost
~Apr 15
Days to harvest
50–60 days
Difficulty
Easy
Wrong season — Zone 5
Harvest: Jun - Oct
Harvest urgency: weekly — Harvest window lasts several weeks

Planting Calendar

In Zone 5, Nasturtium can be planted outdoors from Apr 22 — the window closes around Jun 3.

Your zone at a finer grain NOAA 1991–2020

Zone 5 is split into two subzones. The a/b distinction affects your exact last frost date by 1–2 weeks -- meaningful for heat-sensitive crops and fruit tree hardiness.

SubzoneLast frostFirst fallSeasonMin temp
5a May 5Oct 11~158 days -20 to -15°F
5b Apr 25Oct 17~173 days -15 to -10°F

plant detects your subzone from your location and adjusts planting windows accordingly.

Growing Journey

Here is what to expect at each stage — and what to do when you get there.

GerminationDay 5-21

Most flowers can be sown directly or started indoors. Annuals started indoors get a head start on the season.

SeedlingDay 7-28

Thin to recommended spacing. Crowded flowers bloom less and are more prone to disease.

EstablishedDay 21-60

Pinch out growing tips on many annual flowers to encourage bushy, multi-stem plants with more blooms.

BuddingDay 40-80

Feed with a high-potassium fertiliser to support bud development and continuous blooming.

FloweringDay 55-120

Deadhead regularly on most annuals to keep production going. Leaving spent flowers to seed tells the plant its job is do

Seed SavingDay 90-150

Let the last flowers of the season set seed. Collect when seed heads are dry and papery. Store in paper envelopes in a c

What to Expect

Typical yield
Hundreds of flowers and leaves throughout the season

Every part of the nasturtium is edible -- flowers, leaves, and the green seeds pickled as capers. One of the most useful garden plants.

Key factorspoor soil produces more flowers than rich soilconsistent moisturedeadheading
Get notified when to plant, deadhead, and cut your Nasturtium — personalized for your zone.
Grown Nasturtium before?or

Care Guide

Sunlight
Full sun to partial shade · 4–8 hrs/day
Watering
Low
Spacing
12–36 inches
Soil
Poor to average, well-draining
Days to first bloom
50–60 days
Soil pH
6.0–7.5
Plant tip · Zone 5
Do not fertilize nasturtiums -- too much nitrogen produces all leaves and few flowers. Plant in poor soil for best blooms. The peppery leaves and flowers are excellent in salads.
How to know it's ready
Pick flowers and young leaves at any time -- the more you pick, the more they produce. Flowers are best in the morning. Young round leaves are mildest; older leaves are more peppery.

Watering Nasturtium

How often
Every 7-10 days -- nasturtiums actually flower better in lean, dry conditions
How much
0.5-1 inch per week
Method
At soil level
Overwatering signs
Yellow leaves, fewer flowers, more foliage
Underwatering signs
Wilting (recovers quickly with water)

Feeding Schedule

How often
none
Feed type
None or very light
Key timing
N/A
NPK: nasturtiums flower best in poor soil -- fertilizer reduces blooms

Nasturtiums thrive in poor soil. Fertilizing produces leafy growth with very few flowers.

Example product: Skip feeding or use compost only
Direct
Most annual flowers can be direct sown after last frost. Many also benefit from indoor starting 6-8 weeks early for earlier blooms.
Container friendly · Minimum 1 gallons
Most annual flowers grow well in containers. Use any pot with good drainage -- window boxes and hanging baskets work well.
Deadheading & Cutting
Deadheading is optional -- nasturtiums self-seed prolifically if allowed to set seed. If you want continuous flowers rather than seeds, remove spent blooms. Edible seed pods can be pickled as a caper substitute.

Companion Planting

Some plants help Nasturtium thrive. Others compete or cause problems.

Grows well with
BrassicasCucumbersTomatoes
Keep apart from
Fennel

Common Problems

Something went wrong? Here is what likely happened and what to do differently next time.

Frost or cold damage

What happened: Tender annual flowers like marigolds, nasturtiums, and zinnias are killed by even a light frost. If planted out too early before last frost has reliably passed, one cold night ends them.

Next season: Wait until after last frost to plant tender annuals outside. Hardy annuals like calendula, sweet alyssum, and sweet peas can go out earlier and handle frost once established.

Pests or disease

What happened: Powdery mildew is common on many flowers in humid conditions. Aphids cluster on soft growing tips. Slugs devastate young seedlings especially in wet springs.

Next season: Ensure good airflow between plants. Protect seedlings from slugs in the first few weeks. Remove affected leaves promptly at the first sign of mildew.

Stopped flowering early

What happened: Annual flowers stop producing when they set seed. Skipping deadheading -- removing spent flowers -- allows seed to form and tells the plant its job is done. Production slows dramatically.

Next season: Deadhead every few days without exception during the flowering season. This single habit extends flowering by weeks and often months.

Too little water

What happened: Drought stress causes flowers to drop prematurely and reduces bud production. Annual flowers especially need consistent moisture to keep producing.

Next season: Water consistently at the base. Containers especially dry out fast in summer -- they may need daily watering in hot weather.

Not enough sun

What happened: Most flowering plants need full sun -- 6+ hours -- to bloom well. In shade they produce foliage but few flowers.

Next season: Site sun-loving flowers in your brightest spot. If your garden is mostly shaded, focus on shade-tolerant flowers like impatiens, begonias, and violas rather than fighting the conditions.

What went wrong

Something didn't work out? Here is what likely happened and what to do differently next season.

Frost or cold damage

What happened: Tender annual flowers like marigolds, nasturtiums, and zinnias are killed by even a light frost. If planted out too early before last frost has reliably passed, one cold night ends them.

Next season: Wait until after last frost to plant tender annuals outside. Hardy annuals like calendula, sweet alyssum, and sweet peas can go out earlier and handle frost once established.

Pests or disease

What happened: Powdery mildew is common on many flowers in humid conditions. Aphids cluster on soft growing tips. Slugs devastate young seedlings especially in wet springs.

Next season: Ensure good airflow between plants. Protect seedlings from slugs in the first few weeks. Remove affected leaves promptly at the first sign of mildew.

Stopped flowering early

What happened: Annual flowers stop producing when they set seed. Skipping deadheading -- removing spent flowers -- allows seed to form and tells the plant its job is done. Production slows dramatically.

Next season: Deadhead every few days without exception during the flowering season. This single habit extends flowering by weeks and often months.

Too little water

What happened: Drought stress causes flowers to drop prematurely and reduces bud production. Annual flowers especially need consistent moisture to keep producing.

Next season: Water consistently at the base. Containers especially dry out fast in summer -- they may need daily watering in hot weather.

Not enough sun

What happened: Most flowering plants need full sun -- 6+ hours -- to bloom well. In shade they produce foliage but few flowers.

Next season: Site sun-loving flowers in your brightest spot. If your garden is mostly shaded, focus on shade-tolerant flowers like impatiens, begonias, and violas rather than fighting the conditions.

Pests & Diseases

Know what to look for before it gets out of hand — early identification is the most important step.

What to look for
Clusters of tiny soft insects on new growth and leaf undersides. Leaves curl, yellow, or become sticky with honeydew. Sooty black mold may follow.
Cause
Multiple aphid species. Populations explode rapidly in warm weather.
Organic treatment
Blast off with strong water jet. Apply insecticidal soap or neem oil directly to colonies. Introduce ladybugs or lacewings.
Prevention
Plant marigolds and nasturtiums nearby. Avoid excess nitrogen fertilizer which creates soft, aphid-attractive growth. Encourage beneficial insects.
What to look for
Irregular holes in leaves overnight. Slime trails visible in morning. Seedlings may be severed at soil level.
Cause
Slugs and snails. Active in cool, moist conditions and at night.
Organic treatment
Set out beer traps at soil level. Apply diatomaceous earth around plant bases. Hand-pick at night with a torch. Iron phosphate slug pellets are organic-approved.
Prevention
Reduce mulch depth near seedlings. Eliminate hiding spots. Encourage hedgehogs and ground beetles.
What to look for
White powdery coating on leaf surfaces, stems, and sometimes fruit. Leaves may yellow and die. Worst in warm days with cool nights.
Cause
Fungal disease favoured by humid conditions with poor air circulation.
Organic treatment
Spray with diluted neem oil or a baking soda solution (1 tsp per quart water). Apply potassium bicarbonate spray. Remove and destroy affected leaves.
Prevention
Space plants for good airflow. Water at soil level, not on foliage. Choose resistant varieties. Avoid overhead irrigation.

Recommended Varieties

  • Alaska (variegated leaves, beautiful)
  • Jewel Mix (compact, all colours)
  • Empress of India (dark foliage, scarlet flowers)
  • Climbing Mixed (for trellises and fences)
Alaska has stunning variegated foliage -- attractive even when not in bloom. Equally useful as pest trap crop.
Crop Rotation — rotate every 1 years
Annual companion flower
Avoid planting after: None
Good to follow: Anywhere -- nasturtiums self-seed and improve wherever they grow
Nasturtiums self-seed freely -- allow them to find their own spot. They work as trap crops for aphids in any location.

Storing Your Harvest

Room temp
1-2 days in water
Fridge
3-5 days
Freezer
Freeze flowers in ice cubes for drinks -- decorative
Best eaten fresh. Flowers and seeds can be pickled in vinegar (capers substitute).

Free app · Kickstarter October 2027 · iOS February 2028

Know exactly when to plant, prune, and harvest Nasturtium

plant uses your ZIP code and real frost data to tell you the right day — not just the right month. Get notified when your planting window opens, when to succession sow, and when to cut back for next season.

Be first to back on Kickstarter · founding grower pricing locked in.

Weather watch

plant monitors these conditions and sends an alert the moment they are forecast for your location.

Frost Warning
Frost warning -- protect tender annual flowers
Tender annual flowers like marigolds, nasturtiums, and zinnias are frost-sensitive. Cover with fleece tonight or bring containers inside. Hardy annuals like calendula and sweet peas handle light frost well.
MEDIUM priority
High Humidity
High humidity -- watch for powdery mildew on flowers
Many flowers are prone to powdery mildew in humid conditions. Ensure good airflow between plants and avoid watering the foliage. Remove affected leaves promptly.
LOW priority

Moon phase planting

Traditional growers have used lunar cycles to time planting and harvest for centuries. The moon affects moisture levels in soil and sap flow in plants.

Flowering crop
Waxing moon -- plant and harvest fresh flowers
Plant on a waxing moon for strongest establishment. Harvest fresh flowers on a waxing moon for peak fragrance. Harvest for drying on a waning moon -- lower moisture means longer storage life.
Lunar phase guide
New moon → Full moon
Waxing phase
Best for planting above-ground crops. Sap rises, germination is stronger. Good for transplanting.
Full moon → New moon
Waning phase
Best for harvesting, pruning, and root crops. Energy draws downward. Good for dividing perennials.
Full moon
Peak moisture
Avoid planting -- seeds may rot in high-moisture conditions. Good for harvesting crops to eat fresh.
New moon
Rest period
Avoid planting or transplanting. Best for soil preparation, weeding, and composting.

Common questions

In Zone 5, direct sow nasturtium outdoors Apr 22 - Jun 3 after your last frost of approximately Apr 15.
Zone 5 has an average last spring frost around Apr 15 and a first fall frost around Oct 15. These vary by location — the plant app uses your ZIP code with NOAA data for precision.
Good companions for nasturtium include Brassicas, Cucumbers, Tomatoes. Avoid planting near Fennel.
Nasturtium typically takes 50–60 days to harvest in Zone 5. Expected harvest window: Jun - Oct.

These guides get better when growers share what they know. If something's off or you've learned something worth passing on, add it here -- accepted tips earn you a Founding Grower badge when plant launches.

Your tip for growing Nasturtium

Your name (optional)

Your zone

Your email (optional)

Tips are reviewed before publishing. Zone 5 tips appear on nearby zone pages too.

Thanks for contributing! We'll review your tip and be in touch before launch.

What needs correcting?

What should it say?

Your email (optional)

Thanks -- we'll review this and update the guide if needed.
Flowers