ZonePlant

USDA hardiness zone

Zone 6b

Mid-temperate zone with reliable peaches and a wide variety of apples.

On the zone ramp

Lowest winter temp
-5°F to 0°F USDA boundary
Growing season
190 days
Avg chill hours
~1100 below 45°F
Hardiness rank
12 of 26 temperate
Compatible crops
87
Sample region
Long Island

Growing in zone 6b

Zone 6b occupies a mid-temperate band with winter lows between -5 and 0°F and a growing season of roughly 190 days. That combination is long enough for the full range of common temperate fruit crops, yet cold enough to accumulate the chill hours that apples, cherries, and European plums require. Representative areas include Long Island, Southern Indiana, and Northern Virginia, though local microclimates shift individual sites considerably. Urban heat islands along the Long Island coast, and elevation changes in the Virginia Piedmont foothills, can push a given orchard a half-zone in either direction.

Peaches are the reliable bellwether for zone 6b suitability. A site that ripens freestone peaches consistently can typically also carry sweet and sour cherries, European and Japanese plums, pears, and American persimmons without cold-hardiness uncertainty. The binding constraint is rarely summer heat; it is late-spring frost timing, which can catch early-blooming varieties badly in a cold year.

Cedar-apple rust and fire blight are endemic across much of the eastern geography covered by this zone. Stink bug pressure has expanded meaningfully over the past decade and now warrants inclusion in any management plan for peaches and apples. Humidity during the growing season is the common thread behind most of the zone's pest and disease challenges, and any variety selection or spray program that ignores local humidity patterns will underperform.

Frost timing in zone 6b

Last spring frost in zone 6b typically falls between April 15 and May 1 across most representative sites. Long Island coastal locations, moderated by the Atlantic and Long Island Sound, often clear frost risk by mid-April. Inland sites in Southern Indiana and higher-elevation spots in Northern Virginia may hold frost risk into the first week of May. First fall frost generally arrives between October 10 and October 25.

For fruit growers, the spring date carries more operational weight than the fall date. Fruit tree blossoms open weeks before full leaf-out and sustain damage at 28°F or below held for 30 minutes or more. A late frost in late April or early May can eliminate most of a peach or sweet cherry crop in a single night. Late-blooming apple varieties such as Goldrush or Enterprise, and late-blooming peach selections, reduce this exposure by pushing blossom timing past the most dangerous window. The fall frost date affects late-ripening vegetable crops and a narrow range of late-season apples, but most zone 6b fruit ripens well before mid-October.

Common challenges

  • Cedar-apple rust
  • Fire blight
  • Stink bugs

Best practices

Select fire-blight-resistant varieties before purchasing trees. Fire blight (caused by Erwinia amylovora) is reliable annual pressure in the humid eastern portions of zone 6b. In apple, Enterprise, Goldrush, and Liberty carry good field-tested resistance. In pear, Harrow Sweet and Moonglow consistently outperform susceptible options like Bartlett. Planting a susceptible variety and relying on copper or streptomycin sprays at bloom is a workable fallback, but it adds timing complexity and chemical cost that disease-resistant selections avoid entirely.

Time fungicide applications around the cedar-apple rust spore release window. Where eastern red cedar (Juniperus virginiana) grows within roughly half a mile, galls release spores during wet spring weather from bud break through petal fall, a window of 4 to 6 weeks. Captan or myclobutanil applied at 7 to 10 day intervals during this window substantially reduces infection on susceptible apple varieties. Rust-resistant selections reduce but do not eliminate the need for a spray program.

Start monitoring for brown marmorated stink bug in late July rather than waiting for visible fruit damage. By the time stippling or internal scarring appears, populations are already established. Exclusion netting is the most reliable intervention for high-value trees; kaolin clay provides partial deterrence in organic programs.

What to grow in zone 6b

87 crops from our database fit zone 6b, grouped by type. Click through for zone-specific variety recommendations.

Vegetables

40 crops

Tomate (tomato) zone 6b

Tomato

Solanum lycopersicum

zones 3a–10b

Capsicum annuum (pepper-sweet) zone 6b

Sweet Pepper

Capsicum annuum

zones 4a–10b

Capsicum annuum var. Fiesta - MHNT (pepper-hot) zone 6b

Hot Pepper

Capsicum species

zones 4a–10b

Solanum melongena 24 08 2012 (1) (eggplant) zone 6b

Eggplant

Solanum melongena

zones 5a–10b

Solanum tuberosum Red Scarlett20170523 7825 (potato) zone 6b

Potato

Solanum tuberosum

zones 3a–9a

Weißkohl Brassica oleracea var. capitata 2011 (cabbage) zone 6b

Cabbage

Brassica oleracea var. capitata

zones 3a–9b

Brassica oleracea var. italica Limba 2022-04-24 7316 (broccoli) zone 6b

Broccoli

Brassica oleracea var. italica

zones 3a–9a

Bloemkool (cauliflower) zone 6b

Cauliflower

Brassica oleracea var. botrytis

zones 3b–9a

Brassica oleracea var. acephala Redbor 0zz (kale) zone 6b

Kale

Brassica oleracea var. acephala

zones 3a–9b

Young brussels sprouts plant (brussels-sprouts) zone 6b

Brussels Sprouts

Brassica oleracea var. gemmifera

zones 3b–8a

Brassica oleracea var. acephala Victoria Pigeon 0zz (collards) zone 6b

Collards

Brassica oleracea var. acephala

zones 4a–9b

Brassica oleracea var. gongylodes Oktober 2011 (kohlrabi) zone 6b

Kohlrabi

Brassica oleracea var. gongylodes

zones 3b–8a

Cucumber (cucumber) zone 6b

Cucumber

Cucumis sativus

zones 3b–10a

Cucurbita pepo Vilarromaris Oroso Galiza 2 (summer-squash) zone 6b

Summer Squash

Cucurbita pepo

zones 3b–10a

Cucurbita maxima x C. moschata (zapallo kabutia o japonés o grupo Tetsukabuto) (winter-squash) zone 6b

Winter Squash

Cucurbita maxima and Cucurbita moschata

zones 4a–9a

Cucurbita maxima 04 (pumpkin) zone 6b

Pumpkin

Cucurbita pepo and Cucurbita maxima

zones 4a–8b

Cucumis melo 34 (melon) zone 6b

Melon

Cucumis melo

zones 5a–10a

Fodder Melon (watermelon) zone 6b

Watermelon

Citrullus lanatus

zones 5b–10a

Zwiebeln auf Antigua (onion) zone 6b

Onion

Allium cepa

zones 3a–9b

GarlicBasket (garlic) zone 6b

Garlic

Allium sativum

zones 3a–9a

In zaad geschoten prei. (Allium ampeloprasum). Locatie, De Kruidhof Buitenpost 03 (leek) zone 6b

Leek

Allium ampeloprasum

zones 3b–8b

Shallot - Piece (shallot) zone 6b

Shallot

Allium cepa var. aggregatum

zones 3b–8a

Allium fistulosum 2 (scallion) zone 6b

Scallion (Bunching Onion)

Allium fistulosum

zones 3b–9b

Ayocote (bean-bush) zone 6b

Bush Bean

Phaseolus vulgaris

zones 3b–9a

Ayocote (bean-pole) zone 6b

Pole Bean

Phaseolus vulgaris

zones 3b–9a

-2020-06-28 Garden pea (Pisum sativum), Trimingham, Norfolk (1) (pea) zone 6b

Pea

Pisum sativum

zones 3a–8b

Arachis hypogaea (DITSL) (peanut) zone 6b

Peanut

Arachis hypogaea

zones 6a–9b

Romaine lettuce (lettuce) zone 6b

Lettuce

Lactuca sativa

zones 3a–9b

Spinazie vrouwelijke plant (Spinacia oleracea female plant) (spinach) zone 6b

Spinach

Spinacia oleracea

zones 3a–9a

Beta vulgaris subsp. maritima kz05 (swiss-chard) zone 6b

Swiss Chard

Beta vulgaris subsp. vulgaris

zones 3a–9b

Starr 070906-8899 Eruca vesicaria subsp. sativa (arugula) zone 6b

Arugula

Eruca vesicaria

zones 3b–9a

Carrots at Ljubljana Central Market (carrot) zone 6b

Carrot

Daucus carota subsp. sativus

zones 3a–9a

Beta vulgaris, San Francisco farmers market (beet) zone 6b

Beet

Beta vulgaris

zones 3a–9a

Radish 3371103037 4ab07db0bf o (radish) zone 6b

Radish

Raphanus sativus

zones 3a–9a

Brassica rapa subsp. rapa (turnip) zone 6b

Turnip

Brassica rapa subsp. rapa

zones 3a–8b

Pastinaca sativa vallee-de-grace-amiens 80 21072007 4 (parsnip) zone 6b

Parsnip

Pastinaca sativa

zones 3a–8a

Ipomoea batatas 006 (sweet-potato) zone 6b

Sweet Potato

Ipomoea batatas

zones 6a–10b

Starr-120625-7599-Zea mays-Ilini Xtra Sweet ears ready to eat-Olinda-Maui (24889896610) (corn) zone 6b

Sweet Corn

Zea mays var. saccharata

zones 3b–9a

Steam-boiling green asparagus (asparagus) zone 6b

Asparagus

Asparagus officinalis

zones 3b–8b

Abelmoschus esculentus (1) (okra) zone 6b

Okra

Abelmoschus esculentus

zones 6a–10b

When to plant

Planting calendar for zone 6b

Year-view of seed starting, transplanting, planting, pruning, fertilizing, harvest, and pest-watch windows based on the average frost timing for zone 6b.

Week ? · loading

This week in zone 6b

Quiet week in zone 6b. this week is a good time to step back and plan ahead.

Nothing critical on the calendar this week.

434 bars · 87 crops

Filter

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.

Frequently asked questions

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Can I grow peaches reliably in zone 6b?

Yes. Zone 6b is well within the peach's viable range. The main risks are late-spring frosts catching open blossoms in cold years and, in humid eastern sites, brown rot and bacterial spot pressure during wet summers. Variety selection matters: look for late-blooming, disease-tolerant selections developed for mid-Atlantic or Midwest conditions rather than Southeast-adapted varieties bred for warmer winters.

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Which apple varieties perform best against fire blight in zone 6b?

Enterprise, Goldrush, Liberty, and Williams Pride are consistently rated resistant in university trial data from Cornell, Purdue, and Virginia Tech. Honeycrisp carries moderate susceptibility and requires protective sprays at bloom in humid years. Fuji and Gala are significantly susceptible and are generally poor choices for growers who want to minimize chemical inputs.

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Do sweet cherries work in zone 6b, or is the disease pressure too high?

Sweet cherries are cold-hardy enough for zone 6b winters, but bacterial canker and brown rot are serious concerns in humid eastern portions of the zone. Sites with good air drainage, low fog frequency, and well-draining soil give substantially better results than low-lying or humid locations. Sour cherries such as Montmorency are considerably more tolerant of humid conditions and are a lower-risk choice for most zone 6b sites.

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What is the typical last frost date for zone 6b, and how much does it vary?

Most zone 6b sites see their last spring frost between April 15 and May 1, but the range within the zone is meaningful. Coastal Long Island sites often clear by mid-April due to marine moderation, while inland Indiana sites may hold frost risk into early May. Elevation adds further variation: a site 400 feet above a valley floor can be 3 to 5 days later than the valley bottom. Local historical records from the nearest NOAA weather station are more reliable than zone-level averages for site-specific planning.

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Is cedar-apple rust a problem I need to manage every year?

In areas of zone 6b with abundant eastern red cedar nearby, yes. The rust pathogen requires both a cedar host and an apple (or hawthorn) host to complete its cycle. If mature cedars grow within roughly half a mile of the orchard, annual rust pressure during wet springs is realistic. Planting rust-resistant apple varieties is the most durable solution; fungicide programs are effective but require precise timing relative to bud break.

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How serious is the stink bug problem for zone 6b fruit growers?

Brown marmorated stink bug has become a genuine economic pest across much of zone 6b, particularly in the Mid-Atlantic region. Peaches and apples are the most affected crops. Populations peak in late summer and early fall, coinciding with fruit maturity. Exclusion netting is the most effective control for small plantings; insecticide programs exist but require careful timing and repeated applications. The pest is far easier to manage with early monitoring starting in July than with reactive treatment after damage appears.

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