The outdoor cannabis season is eagerly awaited each year. The most important questionsâ"When to plant outdoor cannabis?", "When to harvest?" and "What is the cannabis growing calendar?"âreturn every spring and autumn. The answer depends on your frost zone, day length, and chosen genetics. Here you'll find a complete outdoor cannabis cultivation calendar for European countries and regions, from the last spring frost to safe harvest dates, with practical advice.
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Frost Zones in Europe â Last and First Frost Dates
Europe is a climatic mosaic:
The North (Scandinavia, Baltic countries) is characterized by the shortest summers and high risk of night frosts.
Central Europe (Poland, Germany, Czechia) has moderate springs and autumns with frosts possible until mid-May and again from mid-September.
Southern Europe (France, Italy, Spain, Greece) offers the longest outdoor growing season, almost free of frosts.
The last spring frostâwhen it's safe to plant outdoorsâdepends on the region. The first autumn frost marks the limit for harvesting late strains. Your local microclimate may shift these dates by a week or two.
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Table: Frost Dates in Europe
Region | Last spring frost | First autumn frost |
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Northern Europe | May 20 â June 10 | September 1 â September 20 |
Central Europe | April 10 â May 10 | September 20 â October 20 |
Southern Europe | March 1 â April 1 | October 20 â November 30 |
Photoperiod and Latitude
Photoperiodâthat is, day lengthâcontrols flowering in photoperiod cannabis strains. When the day shortens below around 14â15 hours, the plant starts to flower. The further north, the longer the days in summer, so flowering begins later. In Central Europe, days below 15 hours start from mid-July; in the south, earlier. Automatic strains ("autoflowering") do not react to day lengthâthey flower about 2â4 weeks after sprouting, regardless of light.
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Optimal Planting Dates by Region
Safe planting starts after the last frost. Too earlyârisk of damage; too lateâsmaller yields. Before moving plants outside, harden them for at least a week. Automatic strains can be sown outdoors earlier, as soon as soil temperature exceeds 12â15°C.
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Table: Outdoor Cannabis Planting Calendar in Europe
Region | Indoor seed sowing | Planting after hardening |
---|---|---|
Northern Europe | late May â early June | June 5â15 |
Central Europe | April â mid-May | May 10â25 |
Southern Europe | March â early April | April 1â15 |
Harvest Dates: Photoperiod vs Autoflowering
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Photoperiod strains:
Early: late August â mid-September
Medium: mid-September â early October
Late: second half of October â first frost
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Autoflowering:
Sown in May: harvest in late July or early August
Sown in June: harvest in late August or early September
Sown in July: harvest in late September to early October
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Table: Harvest Dates by Region
Region | Early photoperiod | Medium photo. | Late photo. | Autoflowering |
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North | Sept 1â15 | Sept 15âOct 1 | Oct 10â25 | July 20âSept 5 |
Central | Aug 25âSept 10 | Sept 10â30 | Oct 1â20 | July 20âSept 5 |
South | Aug 10â25 | Sept 1â20 | Sept 20âNov 10 | July 20âAug 20 |
Weather Contingency Plan
Cold nights: Use garden fleece or move potted plants under plastic tunnels.
Heavy rains: Ensure good drainage, remove lower leaves, maintain spacing between plants.
Heat waves: Water in the morning and evening, use shading, add hydrogel to the soil.
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Table: Calendar Adjustments According to Microclimate
Parameter | Calendar effect | Date adjustment |
---|---|---|
South-facing patio | Warmer, earlier | Plant/harvest -7 days |
North-facing | Cooler, more humid | Plant/harvest +7 days |
Near water | Mild temp. variation | Plant/harvest -7 days |
Open field | Frost/wind risk | Plant/harvest +7â14 days |
FAQ
When is the earliest to plant outdoor cannabis after frost?
The earliest is after the last frostâearly June in northern Europe, mid-May in central, as early as April in the south. Soil temperature should be at least 12â15°C.
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How does day length affect flowering in Poland?
Photoperiod strains start flowering when the day shortens below 15 hours (usually mid-July). Autoflowering strains are not affected by day length.
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When to harvest autoflowering vs photoperiod plants in northern/southern EU?
Photoperiod: mid-August to first frost, depending on type. Autoflowering: 7â11 weeks after sowingâearlier in warmer regions.
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What to do if frost is forecast in September?
Protect plants with fleece, move pots to warmer places, reduce watering, and trim leaves to accelerate harvest.
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Can you speed up or delay harvest without losing quality?
Harvest can be sped up by reducing water and increasing potassium/phosphorus, but doing so too quickly lowers quality. Delaying increases risk of mold and frost damageâfollow forecasts and donât wait too long.
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Summary
Choose planting date by frost zone.
Day length determines flowering in photoperiod strains.
Adjust dates according to your local microclimate and weather.
Keep a grow diaryâoptimize for next seasons.
Plan harvest flexibly for chosen genetics and climatic conditions.