USDA Plant Hardiness Zone Map

What Is the Map? What is your zone?

The US Department of Agriculture produces a map for gardeners based on the average of low temperature readings taken from weather stations throughout the United States. The idea is to give the garden industry a way to communicate the cold hardiness of landscape plants. That is why the tag of a holly or any other landscape plant often says "hardy to zone __."

Of course, the map also provides vegetable and herb gardeners like you with a rough guide to the extent of cold where you live. Many of our perennial flowers and herbs are hardy as far north as zones 3 or 4. Cool season vegetables, most of which tolerate or even like a little frost, will grow well in Zones 7 and southward in the fall. This is roughly where we distribute transplants to your local garden center at the proper time for planting.

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Hypertext version of USDA Hardiness Zone Map
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AK  AL  AR  AZ  CA  CO  CT  DC  DE  FL  GA  IA  ID  IL  IN  KS  KY
LA  MA  MD  ME  MI  MN  MO  MS  MT  NC  ND  NE  NH  NJ  NM  NV  NY
OH  OK  OR  PA  RI  SC  SD  TN  TX  UT  VA  VT  WA  WI  WV  WY

USDA Miscellaneous Publication No. 1475. Issued January 1990.
Note: This publication is not copyrighted, and permission to reproduce all or any part of it is not required.