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Lettuce · Adelaide, SA

When to plant lettucein Adelaide.

Adelaide’s mediterranean/temperate climate gives you a specific window for lettuce. Here’s the exact timing, spacing, family-of-4 quantities, and what to plant alongside it.

The short answer

Plant february-may, august-november in Adelaide.

Climate zone: Mediterranean/Temperate · Frost risk: Frost-free (plains), light frosts July-August in Hills · Time to harvest: 45-70 days

Planting window

February-May, August-November

Spacing

25 cm apart

30 cm between rows

Sun & water

Partial shade to full sun, afternoon shade in summer

Water: Regular, keep consistently moist but not waterlogged

Family of 4

Plant 8-12 plants in succession for a family of 4; succession sow every 3 weeks for continuous supply

Growing lettuce 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 lettuce, the productive window in Adelaide is february-may, august-november. Within that window, Lettuce is one of the easiest and most rewarding crops for Australian raised bed gardeners. It prefers cool weather and will bolt (run to seed) quickly in temperatures above 25°C, so timing is everything. In most Australian climates, autumn through spring is the prime lettuce season. Sow seeds direct into prepared beds at 5mm depth, or transplant seedlings spaced 20-25cm apart for heading varieties. For loose-leaf types grown as cut-and-come-again, broadcast seed more densely and thin to 15cm. Loose-leaf varieties like 'Oak Leaf', 'Cos', and 'Mignonette' are more heat-tolerant than iceberg or butterhead types. Lettuces grown in raised beds benefit enormously from consistent moisture, the loose, free-draining structure of raised bed mix can dry out faster than in-ground beds. Water at the base rather than overhead to reduce fungal disease risk. Mulch between plants with fine compost to retain moisture and suppress weeds. In summer, grow lettuce in the shadow cast by taller crops like trellised cucumbers or tomatoes, partial shade can extend your harvest season by several weeks. Alternatively, use 30-40% shade cloth as a cover during hot spells. Sow a small patch every 2-3 weeks for continuous harvest rather than a large single planting that all matures at once. Feed lightly with a high-nitrogen liquid fertiliser every two weeks to encourage lush, tender leaf growth.

Sizing it for your household

Plant 8-12 plants in succession for a family of 4; succession sow every 3 weeks for continuous supply 200-500g per plant (heading); ongoing for cut-and-come-again. 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 30 cm between rows) means a standard 1.2 m × 2.4 m raised bed in Adelaide can hold 38 lettuce 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 lettuce include Carrot, Radish, Strawberry, Cucumber. In Adelaide’s mediterranean/temperate climate, these pairings reduce pest pressure and improve pollination. Keep lettuce away from Celery, Parsley, 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

Snails and slugs are the number-one lettuce pest in Australian gardens, use iron-based snail bait (pet-safe) around the bed perimeter. Aphids can colonise the heart of lettuce heads; wash off with water or remove outer leaves. Downy mildew appears as yellow patches on upper leaves with grey fuzz beneath in humid conditions, improve airflow and avoid overhead watering. Tip burn (brown leaf margins) is caused by calcium deficiency or heat stress, not a disease.

Harvest

For loose-leaf varieties, harvest outer leaves continuously, leaving the growing centre intact. For heading types, harvest the whole head when firm. Harvest in the morning for maximum crispness. Bolting plants (elongated central stem) taste bitter, harvest immediately or compost them.

Frequently asked

When should I plant lettuce in Adelaide?

In Adelaide (mediterranean/temperate climate), plant lettuce February-May, August-November. Frost risk in Adelaide: Frost-free (plains), light frosts July-August in Hills.

How many lettuce plants does a family of 4 need?

Plant 8-12 plants in succession for a family of 4; succession sow every 3 weeks for continuous supply. Expected yield per plant: 200-500g per plant (heading); ongoing for cut-and-come-again. Plant Planner does this calculation automatically based on your exact household size.

How much space does lettuce need in a Adelaide raised bed?

Lettuce needs 25cm between plants and 30cm between rows. For a family of 4, allow enough bed area to fit the plants noted above with that spacing.

How long does lettuce take to grow in Adelaide?

Lettuce takes 45-70 days. Germination is 4-10 days. Adelaide's mediterranean/temperate climate can shift these windows by a week or two, particularly during the shoulder seasons.

What grows well with lettuce?

Good companions in Adelaide include Carrot, Radish, Strawberry, Cucumber. Avoid planting next to Celery, Parsley.