What to do in the Garden in March
This page may contain affiliate links. Learn More.
What can you do in the garden in March to make sure your garden season is the best it can be? March is an exciting time in the garden. So much to do! Check this out for a Month by Month Vegetable Garden Planting Guidemonth by month garden planting guide.
Little Sprouts Preschool Garden is in Eastern Oklahoma, so we are zone 7. Your USDA hardiness zone tells you when your last average frost date is. That is important because your last frost date tells you when it’s time to get your seeds and plants in the ground. Click on the picture below to find your zone.
The first thing you should do now that spring is coming if you didn’t do it in the fall, is top off your raised beds with extra soil or compost, amend your in-ground beds with compost, or make sure new beds are built. This will ensure your growing season will be full of success with the nutrients your plants need added to the soil with the compost.
If you haven’t already ordered seeds to grow, now is a great time to do that. Getting all your plans mapped out so you can make sure you have plenty of what you love growing is a great idea. We use a little spreadsheet and I try to stick to it as much as I can, but we all do get a little excited now and then and lose track of the strict guidelines we start out with.
What to plant in March
If you are growing your own seedlings inside with a light, you should have already planted your cold hardy seeds such as broccoli, cauliflower, kale, cabbage, and lettuces and now is the time to transplant them outside in the garden. If you aren’t growing your own seedlings, you can go to the garden store and pick some up.
Spring garden tasks in zone 7
March is also time to get your cold hardy seeds in the ground such as carrots, radishes, lettuce, peas, spinach, swiss chard, onions and potatoes.
In March you should also be planting your seeds indoors for warm season crops such as peppers and tomatoes if you didn’t get them planted in February and you don’t plan to get them from the garden store.
Early spring is time to plant new fruit trees and bushes as well. We put in a blueberry patch this year and our blueberries came ready to plant this month.
March is also the time to get any of your fall crops harvested that wintered over. We are harvesting Brussels sprouts, herbs, and carrots from the fall garden. We also have some cabbage and kale that are still growing that we can harvest in the next few weeks to make room for more planting.
March garden
It’s a good idea to mulch everything really well to prevent weeds and keep moisture in the soil as well as preventing it from washing away when you water or get spring rains.
We use straw or leaves to mulch our gardens. We just pull the mulch over to the side when we need to plant something. When the plants get about 4-5 inches tall, we put the mulch back around the plant.
This is a sweet little picture that hangs on my wall from many years ago. It’s one of my favorite pictures because the boys were so enthralled with the lettuce we were growing in that pot. I love the looks on their faces.
It was at the beginning of the years I really wanted to teach the kids to grow food before I learned really HOW to do it. If you want to read about the beginning of our success, you can click here.
We recently did a remake of this photo behind the same fence, with the same boys who are teenagers now. These boys have their own gardens at home and still love growing things. It makes my heart happy.
March is full of fun in the garden. The kids and I have been having a ball getting our hands in the dirt again now that it has finally stopped snowing! If you’ve been thinking about gardening this year, it’s not too late, jump in there and do it.
What have you been doing in your garden?
For what to do in the garden each month, click here.
- What to do in the garden in January and February
- What to do in the garden in April
- What to do in the garden in May
- What to do in the garden in June
- What to do in the garden in July
- What to do in the garden in August
- What to do in the garden in September
- What to do in the garden in October
- What to do in the garden in November
- What to do in the garden in December
What part of Oklahoma
Are you in? Just recently moved to piedmont and the soil is so much better up here than our previous town of Mcalester… our garden did great last year and we are excited to start again this year!
We are in northeast oklahoma.
Planting with kids is such a fun! My girls and I just finished the planning our garden and they can’t wait to start planting outside all the seed starters we’ve made. Found some good ideas here in your post and definite;y recommending it to some friends with kids too. Thank you for sharing!
Thank you so much for checking it out! 🙂
Ah! I would totally LOVE a blueberry patch! The possibilities 😉 Hello fresh chia jam!
I would share with you if you lived nearby! 🙂 It’s been a dream for a long time for me. Thanks for the comment!