Celery · Adelaide, SA
When to plant celeryin Adelaide.
Adelaide’s mediterranean/temperate climate gives you a specific window for celery. Here’s the exact timing, spacing, family-of-4 quantities, and what to plant alongside it.
The short answer
Plant january-april, august-september in Adelaide.
Climate zone: Mediterranean/Temperate · Frost risk: Frost-free (plains), light frosts July-August in Hills · Time to harvest: 120-180 days
Planting window
January-April, August-September
Spacing
25 cm apart
35 cm between rows
Sun & water
Full sun to partial shade
Water: High, celery is a riparian plant; do not allow to dry out
Family of 4
4-6 plants provides regular celery for a family of 4; succession plant in spring and autumn
Growing celery in Adelaide: the specifics
Adelaide shares Perth's Mediterranean climate but with slightly cooler winters and a more distinct spring growing season. Hot, dry summers can exceed 40°C during heatwaves, while winters are mild with reliable rainfall. The Adelaide Hills just east of the city experience noticeably cooler conditions with light frosts, while the plains and coastal suburbs rarely frost. Spring and autumn are Adelaide's gardening goldilocks zones, warm enough for most vegetables, cool enough for quality harvests. For celery, the productive window in Adelaide is january-april, august-september. Within that window, Celery is a long-season crop that rewards patient gardeners who can provide the consistent moisture and nutrition it demands. It originated from wild celery (smallage) found in marshy wetland environments, this ancestry explains its thirst for water. Start seeds indoors 10-12 weeks before the last frost date, or in summer for autumn transplanting in warmer climates. Celery seed is tiny and slow to germinate, sow on the surface of moist propagating mix and press gently into contact without covering. Keep moist and expect 14-21 days to germination. Seedlings are very slow to develop; maintain warmth and steady moisture throughout. Transplant into the raised bed when seedlings have 4-5 true leaves. Incorporate generous compost and complete fertiliser into the planting area, celery is a heavy feeder. Plant at 25cm spacing and mulch heavily to retain moisture. Feed every 2 weeks with a balanced liquid fertiliser throughout the growing season. Never allow celery to dry out, even one day of drought stress can result in tough, stringy stalks or premature bolting. To produce pale, tender stalks ('blanching'), pile straw or hessian around the developing stems 2-3 weeks before harvest to exclude light. Blanched celery is more tender and milder; unblanched 'self-blanching' varieties are easier to grow. For beginners, 'cutting celery' (also called leaf celery or herb celery) is far more forgiving, it produces smaller, more intensely flavoured stalks and leaves used like parsley. 'Utah' is a reliable full-size variety for Australian gardens.
Sizing it for your household
4-6 plants provides regular celery for a family of 4; succession plant in spring and autumn 500g-1.5kg of stalks per plant. Plant Planner does this maths automatically once you tell it your household size, it’s the part most planners get wrong because they assume every household is the same.
The 25 cm spacing (with 35 cm between rows) means a standard 1.2 m × 2.4 m raised bed in Adelaide can hold 32 celery plants at maximum density, though in practice you’ll want to mix companions in, so plan for roughly 60-70% of that.
Companion plants for Adelaide
Good companions for celery include Tomato, Beans, Leek, Spinach. In Adelaide’s mediterranean/temperate climate, these pairings reduce pest pressure and improve pollination. Keep celery away from Carrot, Parsnip, they fight for the same nutrients or attract shared pests.
Adelaide-specific tips
- Adelaide's extreme summer heatwaves (40°C+) can kill vegetable plants within hours, keep shadecloth on hand and water deeply the day before forecast heatwaves.
- The Adelaide Hills is its own microclimate, if you garden above 400m, treat your conditions more like Canberra and expect frosts from June to September.
- Adelaide's low summer rainfall means drip irrigation is essential, hand-watering raised beds in 38°C heat is exhausting and inefficient.
Common problems
Septoria leaf spot (Septoria apiicola) causes pale spots with dark centres on leaves and is the most common celery disease, remove affected leaves and avoid overhead watering. Slugs and snails attack seedlings aggressively; use iron-based bait. Aphids cluster in the growing crown; wash off with water. Bolting occurs when plants experience cold temperatures below 10°C for extended periods while young, protect seedlings from cold.
Harvest
Harvest celery from the outside of the plant inward, cutting individual stalks at the base. This allows the plant to continue producing. The inner stalks (heart) are the most tender. For a whole-plant harvest, cut the base with a sharp knife 5cm above the soil, the plant may resprout. Celery is best used fresh; refrigerate in a sealed bag or standing upright in water.
Other mediterranean/temperate cities
Frequently asked
When should I plant celery in Adelaide?
In Adelaide (mediterranean/temperate climate), plant celery January-April, August-September. Frost risk in Adelaide: Frost-free (plains), light frosts July-August in Hills.
How many celery plants does a family of 4 need?
4-6 plants provides regular celery for a family of 4; succession plant in spring and autumn. Expected yield per plant: 500g-1.5kg of stalks per plant. Plant Planner does this calculation automatically based on your exact household size.
How much space does celery need in a Adelaide raised bed?
Celery needs 25cm between plants and 35cm between rows. For a family of 4, allow enough bed area to fit the plants noted above with that spacing.
How long does celery take to grow in Adelaide?
Celery takes 120-180 days. Germination is 14-21 days. Adelaide's mediterranean/temperate climate can shift these windows by a week or two, particularly during the shoulder seasons.
What grows well with celery?
Good companions in Adelaide include Tomato, Beans, Leek, Spinach. Avoid planting next to Carrot, Parsnip.