📋 Table of Contents
Succession Planting for Continuous Harvest
Stop the feast-or-famine cycle. This guide shows you exactly how to stagger your plantings so something is always ready to harvest — with a practical weekly planning template for each Australian season.
Why This Matters for Australian Gardeners
Australian growing conditions are unique — ancient soils, extreme seasons, and climate zones ranging from tropical Queensland to cool-temperate Tasmania. This guide is written specifically for Australian gardens, with advice calibrated to your conditions.
Getting Started
The most important thing is to begin. Every experienced Australian gardener started exactly where you are now — with enthusiasm, a patch of ground, and a willingness to learn from both successes and failures. This guide gives you the foundation to succeed faster.
Practical Application
Theory without practice is just words. Throughout this guide we focus on what you can do today, this week, and this season to see real results in your garden. Bookmark this page and return as your garden grows.
Understanding Your Growing Season Calendar
The key to successful succession planting in Australia is timing your sowings to match your local climate zone and season. Unlike Northern Hemisphere gardeners who follow a rigid spring-summer-autumn pattern, Australian growers enjoy staggered opportunities throughout the year.
In warmer regions like Queensland, Northern Territory, and northern Western Australia, you can grow cool-season crops during winter months when temperatures drop to ideal levels. Conversely, gardeners in Tasmania and Victoria need to maximise their shorter warm season and plan winter crops well in advance.
Cool-Season Crops (Autumn, Winter, Spring)
These thrive in temperatures between 10–20°C and include lettuce, spinach, broccoli, cabbage, kale, peas, beans, and root vegetables like carrots and beets. In most Australian regions, plant cool-season crops from March through August, with timing adjusted for your specific location.
- Sydney & Melbourne gardeners: Sow from late February through August for continuous winter harvests
- Brisbane & subtropical zones: Plant from March through September; these crops thrive during your cooler months
- Perth & Adelaide: Begin succession plantings in February and continue until August
- Hobart & cool regions: Start earlier (January) as your season is shorter
Warm-Season Crops (Spring, Summer, Autumn)
Tomatoes, capsicums, eggplant, zucchini, cucumber, beans, and basil need soil temperatures above 15°C to germinate and prefer 20–30°C for growth. These are sown from September through February, depending on your region.
- Sydney & Melbourne: Sow from September through December for harvests December–April
- Brisbane: Plant from August through March for extended harvests
- Perth & Adelaide: October through January plantings work best
- Hobart: Short window of November–December planting; focus on shorter-season varieties
Creating Your Weekly Planting Schedule
Succession planting works best when you establish a regular rhythm. Rather than planting everything at once, you'll plant small batches every 1–2 weeks throughout the growing season. This ensures harvests arrive in waves rather than all at once.
Weekly Planting Method
Choose one day each week — say, every Saturday morning — as your planting day. On this day, plant a small amount of quick-maturing crops like lettuce, radishes, or beans. Over 8–10 weeks, you'll have successive plantings reaching maturity in waves.
For example, if lettuce takes 6–8 weeks from seed to harvest, planting every week means you'll harvest every week once the first planting matures. This creates a predictable, sustainable harvest rhythm.
Two-Week Planting Intervals
Slower-maturing crops like broccoli, cabbage, and capsicums work better with 2-week intervals. Plant one batch, then wait two weeks before planting the next. This reduces overcrowding in your garden bed while still providing continuous supply.
Monthly Planning Template
Here's how to organise your succession planting across a typical growing month:
- Week 1: Plant lettuce, radishes, and spinach
- Week 2: Plant beans and peas (if in season)
- Week 3: Repeat Week 1 plantings; harvest first crop if ready
- Week 4: Repeat Week 2 plantings; evaluate growth and adjust spacing if needed
Print this template and keep it in your garden shed. Note actual planting dates and expected harvest windows. After one season, you'll have a personalised record for your specific garden.
Climate-Specific Timing for Each Australian Region
Australia's climate diversity means succession planting dates vary dramatically by location. Here's a region-by-region breakdown to help you plan accurately.
Subtropical & Tropical Zones (Brisbane, Cairns, Darwin, Perth North)
Your advantage is a long growing season with minimal frost risk. Your challenge is extreme summer heat that stops cool-season crops.
- March–September: Succession plant cool-season crops (lettuce, broccoli, kale, carrots, peas). Plant every 2 weeks for continuous harvest
- August–March: Warm-season crops (tomatoes, capsicums, beans, zucchini). Begin warm-season plantings in August to establish before peak heat arrives
- October–February: Extreme heat period. Focus on heat-tolerant varieties and provide shade cloth. Consider a mid-summer break rather than fighting impossible conditions
Mediterranean & Temperate Zones (Sydney, Melbourne, Adelaide, Perth South)
These regions enjoy balanced seasons with moderate extremes. You'll have two strong growing periods.
- February–August: Cool-season plantings. Start early (February) and continue weekly through August
- September–January: Warm-season plantings. Overlap months (September–October and December–January) allow you to grow both types simultaneously
- Frost consideration: In Melbourne and inland Sydney, last frost typically occurs in September. Don't plant frost-sensitive crops before this date
Cool Temperate Zones (Hobart, Canberra, Melbourne highlands, inland Victoria)
Your season is short but intense. Timing is critical.
- January–August: Focus heavily on cool-season crops. These thrive in your natural climate
- October–January: Compressed warm-season window. Choose early-maturing varieties. Plant in October, not November, to allow 12+ weeks before autumn frost
- September–October frost window: Protect tender seedlings with cloches or row covers. This often-overlooked period causes losses
Common Mistakes to Avoid
Succession planting is simple in theory, but gardeners often make predictable errors. Here's how to avoid them.
- Over-planting: Resist the urge to plant everything at once. Small plantings every week are more manageable and prevent waste
- Ignoring your first frost date: Mark your region's last spring frost and first autumn frost on your calendar. Plant accordingly
- Forgetting soil preparation: Each planting depletes soil nutrients. Refresh beds with compost or organic fertiliser between successions
- Planting too late in the season: Don't sow a new batch of tomatoes in January expecting a full harvest. Allow 10–12 weeks before your first frost date
- Choosing wrong varieties: Quick-maturing lettuce varieties (50–60 days) work better for succession planting than slow types (70+ days)
- Inconsistent watering: Weekly plantings need consistent moisture. Establish drip irrigation or mulching routines before you start
Frequently Asked Questions
What if I miss a week's planting?
Don't worry. Skip that week and resume your schedule the following week. Your harvests will simply start a week later. This is actually preferable to cramming extra plants in.
Can I succession plant perennials?
Perennials (asparagus, artichokes, rhubarb) don't need succession planting. They produce continuously. Succession planting applies to annual vegetables only.
How do I know when to stop planting?
Stop planting 10–12 weeks before your first frost date. Calculate backwards from your local frost date and mark your calendar as a hard stop.
Is succession planting worth the effort?
Absolutely. Once established, it requires minimal extra effort — just one planting session per week. In return, you harvest continuously instead of experiencing gaps or gluts.
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