Zone 8 · Flowers & Companions Growing Guide
The most prolific summer flower you can grow. Loves heat, blooms from summer to frost, and attracts an extraordinary variety of pollinators -- particularly butterflies. The more you cut them, the more they bloom.
In Zone 8, Zinnia can be planted outdoors from Feb 22 — the window closes around May 23.
Zone 8 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.
| Subzone | Last frost | First fall | Season | Min temp |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 8a | Mar 5 | Nov 26 | ~267 days | 10 to 15°F |
| 8b | Feb 23 | Dec 3 | ~283 days | 15 to 20°F |
plant detects your subzone from your location and adjusts planting windows accordingly.
Here is what to expect at each stage — and what to do when you get there.
Most flowers can be sown directly or started indoors. Annuals started indoors get a head start on the season.
Thin to recommended spacing. Crowded flowers bloom less and are more prone to disease.
Pinch out growing tips on many annual flowers to encourage bushy, multi-stem plants with more blooms.
Feed with a high-potassium fertiliser to support bud development and continuous blooming.
Deadhead regularly on most annuals to keep production going. Leaving spent flowers to seed tells the plant its job is do
Let the last flowers of the season set seed. Collect when seed heads are dry and papery. Store in paper envelopes in a c
Flowers in the vegetable garden are one of the most worthwhile additions -- beautiful, functional, and good for pollinators.
Light to moderate feeder. Regular feeding extends bloom season. Avoid high nitrogen which reduces flowering.
Sow every 3 weeks from last frost to midsummer. Zinnias are heat-lovers that bloom prolifically from midsummer -- earlier sowings establish during spring and hit their peak in summer heat. Succession gives you the full summer season of blooms and keeps fresh plants coming as earlier ones age. Zinnias don't transplant well, so direct-sow where they'll grow. Cut flowers regularly -- it triggers more blooming.
Some plants help Zinnia thrive. Others compete or cause problems.
Something went wrong? Here is what likely happened and what to do differently next time.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
Something didn't work out? Here is what likely happened and what to do differently next season.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
Know what to look for before it gets out of hand — early identification is the most important step.
Free app · Kickstarter October 2027 · iOS February 2028
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.
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plant monitors these conditions and sends an alert the moment they are forecast for your location.
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.
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.
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