What to Plant in March — Cool/Alpine Australia
Your complete March planting guide for cool/alpine climate zones. Whether you're in Hobart, Canberra, or Ballarat, this guide tells you exactly what to sow from seed, plant as seedlings, and harvest this autumn.
Covers: Hobart, Canberra, Ballarat, Orange, Launceston and surrounding cool/alpine postcodes(7000 (Hobart), 2600 (Canberra), 3350 (Ballarat), 2800 (Orange))
Cool/Alpine Climate — March Overview
Short growing season with regular frosts and cold winters. Snow possible at elevation.
March falls in autumn for most of Australia, but in cool/alpine zones this means typical seasonal shifts that guide what crops perform best. The recommendations below are calibrated specifically for cool/alpine conditions with local rainfall patterns, temperature ranges, and frost dates in mind.
Sow from Seed
Direct or in punnets
- Spinach
- Mache
- Rocket
- Asian Greens
- Radish
- Garlic (cloves)
- Broad Beans
- Peas
- Kale
- Silverbeet
These crops perform best when direct-seeded or started in seed trays in March for cool/alpine conditions.
Plant as Seedlings
Transplant-ready
- Broccoli
- Cauliflower
- Kale
- Cabbage
- Leek
- Silverbeet
These crops establish faster from nursery seedlings in March. Harden off for 3–5 days before planting out.
Ready to Harvest
From earlier plantings
- Tomato (end)
- Beans
- Zucchini
- Pumpkin
- Cucumber (last)
- Beetroot
- Carrot
- Sweetcorn
Crops typically ready for harvest in March in cool/alpine zones, from plantings made in previous weeks.
March Tip for Cool/Alpine Gardens
Autumn is urgent in cool zones — frosts arrive by May. Garlic goes in this month for a Christmas harvest. Get brassica seedlings established before it cools further. Harvest all summer crops promptly; leaving them on the vine invites rot in cooling weather.
March Garden Tasks — Cool/Alpine Checklist
Soil Preparation
March is an excellent time to refresh beds with aged compost and a slow-release organic fertiliser. In cool/alpine zones, soil pH between 6.0 and 7.0 supports the widest range of vegetables. Test and adjust with lime or sulphur as needed.
Watering Guide
In cool/alpine zones during autumn, water deeply and less frequently to encourage deep root systems. Morning watering reduces fungal disease risk. Raised beds typically need watering every 2–3 days in the current season.
Pest & Disease Watch
Transitional autumn months in cool/alpine zones bring changing pest dynamics. Cabbage white butterfly activity increases in spring. Check undersides of brassica leaves for green caterpillars. Companion-plant nasturtiums and marigolds to confuse and deter common pests.
Succession Planting
Avoid the feast-or-famine cycle by sowing fast-maturing crops — lettuce, radish, Asian greens, and spinach — every 2–3 weeks rather than all at once. In cool/alpine zones during March, a fortnightly succession-sowing rhythm ensures continuous harvests rather than a single glut. Split your available bed space into thirds and plant each third 2 weeks apart. This applies to salad crops year-round and to beans and beetroot in the warmer months.
From the makers
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This guide is a great starting point — Plant Planner goes further with exact sowing dates, quantities based on your family size, companion planting suggestions, and weekly email reminders.
Why Climate Zone Matters for March Planting
Australia spans five distinct climate zones, and the same calendar month means completely different growing conditions depending on where you live. A gardener in Hobart planting in March faces entirely different challenges and opportunities than someone in a cool alpine area like Canberra or Hobart.
For cool/alpine zones specifically, March is the autumn transition — a critical window where the right planting decisions set up your garden for the coming season. The planting recommendations on this page account for typical cool/alpine frost dates, average temperatures, and seasonal rainfall patterns.
For even more precision, VeggiePatch Pro uses your exact Australian postcode to determine your specific microclimate, local frost dates, and the optimal planting windows for your suburb. Enter your postcode for a personalised 12-month planting calendar tailored to your exact location — not just your broad climate zone.
Get a Personalised Plan for Your Garden
This guide is a great starting point, but VeggiePatch Pro goes further. Enter your postcode, your bed measurements, and your family size — we'll generate a complete 12-month planting calendar with exact sowing dates, quantities based on how many people you feed, companion planting suggestions, and weekly email reminders.
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