Snow-covered garden in January
winter

January in Zone 2

January in Zone 2. Ordering seeds from catalogs, planning garden layouts, pruning dormant trees and shrubs, starting onion and leek seeds indoors in cold zones, harvesting winter vegetables in Zones 8–13.

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Min Winter Temp
-50 to -40 °F / -46 to -40 °C
Last Spring Frost
Late May – early June
First Fall Frost
Mid August – early September
Growing Season
75–100 days
Annual Rainfall
12–25 in

January overview

January is the heart of winter in most of the US. For gardeners in cold zones, it is a time for planning, seed ordering, and soil improvement. In warm southern zones, winter vegetables are actively growing and some early planting is underway.

Ordering seeds from catalogs, planning garden layouts, pruning dormant trees and shrubs, starting onion and leek seeds indoors in cold zones, harvesting winter vegetables in Zones 8–13.

Season
winter
Temperature trend
Coldest month of the year in most regions; average temperatures at seasonal low.
Daylight
Shortest days; daylight is slowly increasing from the winter solstice.
Zone 2 last frost
Late May – early June
Zone 2 first frost
Mid August – early September

0

Sow indoors

0

Sow outdoors

0

Transplant

0

Harvest

1

Maintenance

🛠️ Maintenance

Maintenance

Plan, order seeds, and prep

The ground is cold or frozen — the perfect time for the indoor work that makes spring easier.

📌 Order seeds before favorites sell out, sketch next year's layout and rotations, sharpen and oil tools, and start onions/leeks late in the dormant season.

General January tasks

These apply broadly regardless of zone — a useful checklist alongside the zone-specific tasks above.

  • Order seeds from catalogs and plan crop rotations
  • Inventory stored seeds and discard those past their viability window
  • Start onion and leek seeds indoors (cold zones)
  • Prune dormant fruit trees and grape vines
  • Apply dormant oil sprays to fruit trees before buds swell
  • Sharpen and oil garden tools
  • Turn compost pile if not frozen
  • Plan raised bed improvements and new garden layouts

⚠ Watch-outs for January

  • Protect brassicas and root vegetables from hard freezes in Zones 7–8 with row covers
  • Check overwintering bulbs in storage for rot or desiccation
  • Avoid walking on frozen or waterlogged soil — it compacts severely
  • Monitor houseplants for pests that thrive in dry indoor winter conditions

January in Zone 2: common questions

What can I plant in January in Zone 2?

January is mainly a planning and preparation month in Zone 2 — the ground is typically too cold for sowing outdoors. Order seeds, start onions and leeks indoors, and prepare beds for the season ahead.

When is the last and first frost in Zone 2?

Zone 2 typically has its last spring frost around Late May – early June and its first fall frost around Mid August – early September, giving a growing season of roughly 75–100 days. Always check a local frost-date source, since microclimates vary.

What garden jobs matter most in January in Zone 2?

Focus on order seeds from catalogs and plan crop rotations, inventory stored seeds and discard those past their viability window, start onion and leek seeds indoors (cold zones). Watch out for protect brassicas and root vegetables from hard freezes in zones 7–8 with row covers.