Local planting guide · Midwest
zip 63150
Saint Louis is in USDA hardiness zone 7a, with average winter lows of 0°F to 5°F. The local growing season runs roughly 04/08 through 10/26 (~200 days). This zip falls within the Midwest growing region.
- USDA zone
- 7a 0°F to 5°F
- Last spring frost
- 04/08
- First fall frost
- 10/26
- Growing season
- 200 days
- Compatible crops
- 90
- Growing region
- Midwest
Right now in Saint Louis
Week 18 priorities
On the docket: transplant out after last frost · direct sow after last frost. See the full calendar →
Gardening in Saint Louis
Saint Louis sits at the edge of zone 7a's challenges: mild enough for reliable fruit production, but prone to the late spring freezes that plague the region's cherry and peach growers. The April 8 average last frost date is deceptively late for 7a, arriving well after trees have broken dormancy. This timing creates a genuine hazard for early bloomers, where a single hard freeze can collapse the fruit set. The 200-day growing season through October 26 is workable but not luxurious. High humidity from May through September intensifies fungal disease pressure: cedar apple rust thrives here, and fire blight finds favorable conditions during warm, wet springs. Apple, pear, peach, and cherry trees grow well in Saint Louis when variety selection accounts for these constraints. Late-blooming apples and disease-resistant pear varieties are more reliable than standard selections. Figs, while marginal for zone 7a elsewhere, can succeed here during mild winters but should be treated as at-risk in severe cold years.
Regional context · Midwest
What the Midwest brings to Saint Louis
Continental humid. Cold winters, hot humid summers. Heart of the country's vegetable, sweet corn, and cool-climate fruit production. Michigan and Wisconsin are major fruit states.
Common challenges
Issues that most often defeat home gardeners in zone 7a, drawn from the broader USDA zone profile.
- ▸ Cedar-apple rust
- ▸ Brown rot
- ▸ Fire blight
- ▸ High humidity disease pressure
What defeats new gardeners in Saint Louis
Late-spring freezes are the defining risk. Even though April 8 is the statistical average last frost, false springs can trigger blooming weeks earlier, leaving blossoms vulnerable to killing frosts into mid-April. Apple and cherry are the most affected, with entire crop losses possible in years when warm March weather triggers bloom followed by a hard April freeze. Second, cedar apple rust and fire blight thrive in Saint Louis's humid springs. Cedar apple rust, in particular, requires nearby red cedar or juniper as an alternate host and is nearly impossible to control chemically. Choosing resistant apple varieties and understanding local disease phenology is more practical than fighting season after season with fungicides.
Crops that grow in Saint Louis
90 crops from our catalog match zone 7a, grouped by type.
Tree fruit
14 crops
zone 7a Apple
Malus domestica
zones 3a–9a
zone 7a Pear
Pyrus communis
zones 4a–8b
zone 7a Peach
Prunus persica
zones 5a–9a
zone 7a European Plum
Prunus domestica
zones 4a–8a
zone 7a Japanese Plum
Prunus salicina
zones 5b–9a
zone 7a Sweet Cherry
Prunus avium
zones 5a–8a
zone 7a Sour Cherry
Prunus cerasus
zones 4a–7b
zone 7a Fig
Ficus carica
zones 7a–10b
Berries
20 crops
zone 7a Highbush Blueberry
Vaccinium corymbosum
zones 4a–7b
zone 7a Rabbiteye Blueberry
Vaccinium virgatum
zones 7a–9a
zone 7a Red Raspberry
Rubus idaeus
zones 3b–8a
zone 7a Black Raspberry
Rubus occidentalis
zones 4a–8a
zone 7a Yellow Raspberry
Rubus idaeus
zones 3b–8a
zone 7a Blackberry
Rubus subgenus Rubus
zones 5a–9a
zone 7a June-Bearing Strawberry
Fragaria x ananassa
zones 3a–8b
zone 7a Everbearing Strawberry
Fragaria x ananassa
zones 3b–9a
Nuts
6 cropsVegetables
40 crops
zone 7a Tomato
Solanum lycopersicum
zones 3a–10b
zone 7a Sweet Pepper
Capsicum annuum
zones 4a–10b
zone 7a Hot Pepper
Capsicum species
zones 4a–10b
zone 7a Eggplant
Solanum melongena
zones 5a–10b
zone 7a Potato
Solanum tuberosum
zones 3a–9a
zone 7a Cabbage
Brassica oleracea var. capitata
zones 3a–9b
zone 7a Broccoli
Brassica oleracea var. italica
zones 3a–9a
zone 7a Cauliflower
Brassica oleracea var. botrytis
zones 3b–9a
Herbs
10 crops
zone 7a Basil
Ocimum basilicum
zones 4a–10b
zone 7a Parsley
Petroselinum crispum
zones 3b–9b
zone 7a Cilantro / Coriander
Coriandrum sativum
zones 3b–9b
zone 7a Dill
Anethum graveolens
zones 3b–9a
zone 7a Oregano
Origanum vulgare
zones 4a–9b
zone 7a Thyme
Thymus vulgaris
zones 4a–9a
zone 7a Rosemary
Salvia rosmarinus
zones 7a–10b
zone 7a Sage
Salvia officinalis
zones 4a–9a
Plan the year
Planting calendar for Saint Louis
Year-view of seed starting, transplanting, planting, pruning, fertilizing, harvest, and pest-watch windows tuned to Saint Louis's local frost dates.
Week ? · loading
This week in Saint Louis, MO (zone 7a)
Quiet week in Saint Louis, MO (zone 7a). this week is a good time to step back and plan ahead.
Nothing critical on the calendar this week.
451 bars · 90 crops
Calendar logic combines NOAA frost normals with crop-specific timing data. Local microclimate and weather always overrules the calendar; use this as a starting point.
Top pests for zone 7a
Ranked by how many crops in your zone they affect. Click through for IPM controls and signs to watch for.
Odocoileus species
Whitetail and mule deer browse can devastate orchards and gardens, particularly in winter when food is scarce. Antler rub on young trunks kills saplings outright.
Multiple species (Aphididae)
Small soft-bodied sap-sucking insects that reproduce explosively in spring. Excrete honeydew that supports sooty mold and attracts ants. Transmit viral diseases.
Multiple species
Robins, catbirds, mockingbirds, starlings, cedar waxwings and other songbirds can strip ripening berry and fruit crops in days. Crows and blackbirds also damage fresh sweet corn ears in milk stage. The single biggest yield-loss factor in unprotected home plantings.
Sylvilagus and Lepus species
Cottontails and jackrabbits strip bark from young fruit trees in winter and graze tender garden vegetables year-round, especially seedlings.
Popillia japonica
Defoliating beetle introduced to North America in 1916. Skeletonizes leaves of many fruit trees, berry canes, and pecan.
Multiple species (Chrysomelidae)
Tiny black or bronze jumping beetles that put hundreds of small holes in seedling leaves. Most damaging on direct-seeded brassicas and young eggplant.
Microtus species
Field voles and meadow voles girdle young fruit-tree trunks under snow cover during winter and chew root crops. The leading cause of mysterious orchard losses.
Drosophila suzukii
Invasive vinegar fly that attacks ripening soft fruit, unlike native Drosophila species which target overripe fruit. Now the dominant berry-and-cherry pest across the US.
Top diseases for zone 7a
Ranked by how many crops in your zone they affect. Click through for symptoms, controls, and resistant varieties.
Botrytis cinerea
Ubiquitous fungal disease that causes fruit rot during cool wet weather, often the dominant berry disease in humid regions.
Pseudoperonospora cubensis (cucurbits) and others
Water mold (oomycete, not a true fungus) that thrives in cool damp conditions. Spreads rapidly through cucurbit and brassica plantings on wind-borne spores.
Pythium and Rhizoctonia species
Soil-borne complex of water molds and fungi that kill seedlings before or shortly after emergence. The single most common cause of seed-starting failures.
Cucumber mosaic virus, Tobacco mosaic virus, and others
Family of plant viruses producing mottled yellow-and-green leaf patterns. Vectored primarily by aphids; some are seed-transmitted or spread by handling tools and tobacco products.
Agrobacterium tumefaciens
Soil-borne bacterium that enters plants through wounds and induces tumor-like galls on roots, crown, and lower stems. Galls reduce vigor and shorten plant lifespan; on Rubus the disease is often fatal.
Fusarium oxysporum
Soil-borne fungal disease that plugs vascular tissue and kills affected plants. Persists in soil for many years; impossible to eliminate once established.
Sclerotium rolfsii
Soil-borne fungal disease most damaging in warm humid Southern conditions. White mycelial fans and small mustard-seed-sized sclerotia at the soil line are diagnostic.
Phytophthora species
Soil-borne water mold that destroys roots in waterlogged soils, the leading cause of blueberry decline in poorly drained sites.
Companion planting suggestions
Beneficial pairings drawn from companion data, filtered to crops that grow in zone 7a.
- Peach + Garlic
Garlic planted around peach trees suppresses peach borer and provides general fungal-pressure reduction.
- European Plum + Garlic
Garlic discourages plum curculio and provides general antifungal benefit beneath stone fruit.
- Fig + Rosemary
Rosemary tolerates the dry sites figs prefer and provides aromatic pest deterrence.
- American Persimmon + Pawpaw
Both natives thrive in similar soils and contribute to a polyculture that supports native pollinators and fauna.
- Jujube + Thyme
Thyme groundcover suits jujube's low-water profile and deters cabbage moth and aphid populations.
- Apricot + Basil
Basil's volatile oils discourage stone-fruit pests and support pollinator visits.
Soil types reference
Soil texture and pH decide what grows easily on your specific lot. Find the closest match below for crop recommendations and amendment guidance.
Practical tips for Saint Louis
Prioritize late-blooming apple and pear varieties (those flowering in late April or May) to sidestep the April 8 frost window. Early bloomers are frequently damaged by late frosts. Second, if cedar apple rust is present in your neighborhood, select only rust-resistant apple varieties rather than fighting the disease season after season. The humid June and July will defeat most cultural controls. Third, time dormant-season pruning of peach and cherry to begin only after the April 8 date has passed, reducing the window where open wounds might succumb to late-season fungi.
Frequently asked questions
- What fruit trees grow best around Saint Louis?
Apple, pear, peach, and sour cherry are most reliable. European plums succeed in mild years; Japanese plums are riskier due to their very early bloom. Figs can survive in sheltered microclimates but aren't dependable every winter. Choose late-blooming apple varieties specifically.
- Why is the April 8 frost date so critical for fruit?
Early warm spells in March often trigger bloom a week or two early. If a killing frost follows in mid-April, the entire fruit set for the season is lost. Delaying bloom with later-flowering varieties reduces, though doesn't eliminate, this risk.
- What is cedar apple rust and why is it a problem here?
Cedar apple rust is a fungal disease alternating between apple trees and nearby red cedars or junipers. Saint Louis's humidity and abundance of cedar trees create ideal conditions. Resistant apple varieties are the only practical long-term solution.
- When should I start vegetable seeds indoors?
Count back 6 to 8 weeks from the April 8 frost date for frost-sensitive crops like tomatoes and peppers (late February to early March). Cool-season crops can be direct-seeded as soon as soil is workable, typically mid-March.
- Is summer the best time to water fruit trees?
June through August humidity helps, but July can still bring dry spells. Deep watering once a week during dry periods is better than daily light sprinkling. Mulch reduces evaporation and keeps soil temperature consistent.
- What's the biggest weather risk for gardening in Saint Louis?
Late spring frosts damaging fruit blossoms are the most economically damaging. Summer drought is secondary. The growing season is long enough if frost doesn't intervene, but frost is nearly impossible to predict year to year.
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Frost data: NOAA Climate Normals 1991-2020, station USW00003960. Local microclimates can shift these dates by a week or more.
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