When to Plant Vegetables in Victoria, BC

Victoria's Canadian Zone 8b (USDA 8b) Pacific Maritime climate is the mildest of any major Canadian city. Frost is rare, and with 302 frost-free days near-year-round outdoor growing is normal. The city's Mediterranean-influenced summer is also Canada's driest — irrigation is essential despite the mild climate.
Victoria gardeners can harvest fresh vegetables every month of the year with proper planning. The driest major city in BC — summer irrigation is essential despite the mild climate. Overwintered vegetables (cabbage, kale, leeks, broad beans, garlic) are a Victoria speciality unavailable elsewhere in Canada.
Key Dates for Victoria Gardeners
Last Spring Frost
February 15
First Fall Frost
December 15
Seed Start Indoors
January for tomatoes and peppers; direct sow hardy crops from February
Transplant Outdoors
Late March for cool crops, April–May for warm crops
Understanding Victoria's Growing Seasons
Victoria's Zone 8b Pacific Maritime climate supports vegetable gardening virtually year-round. Hardy crops (kale, chard, spinach, leeks, brassicas) produce through winter without protection. Warm-season crops (tomatoes, peppers, beans, squash) have a long production window from May through October. Overwintered crops (garlic, broad beans, overwintering brassicas) extend production into months when the rest of Canada sees bare gardens.
Fall planting for winter harvest is a signature British Columbia technique with no equivalent elsewhere in Canada. Plan your fall garden in July-August for continuous production through March.
What to Plant This Month in Victoria
May
Direct Sow Outdoors
Bean, Corn, Cucumber, Zucchini
Transplant Outdoors
SweetPotato
Harvest
Tomato, Pepper, Zucchini, Cucumber, Bean, Onion, Basil, Eggplant, Beet
Tasks
- Spring warm-season harvest begins in earnest
- Last planting date for most warm-season crops before summer heat
- Begin preserving — canning tomatoes and pickling cucumbers
- Increase watering frequency as temperatures climb
- Side-dress tomatoes and peppers with balanced fertilizer
- Prune lower tomato leaves to prevent soil-borne diseases
Full 12-Month Planting Calendar for Victoria
| Month | Direct Sow | Transplant | Start Indoors | Harvest |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Jan | Pea, Spinach, Lettuce, Radish, Carrot, Beet, Cilantro, Onion | Broccoli, Kale, Onion | Pepper, Eggplant, Tomato | Kale, Lettuce, Spinach, Carrot, Broccoli, Radish, Cilantro |
| Feb | Pea, Spinach, Lettuce, Radish, Carrot, Beet, Bean, Corn, Cilantro | Broccoli, Kale, Lettuce | Tomato, Pepper, Eggplant, Basil | Lettuce, Spinach, Radish, Kale, Broccoli, Carrot, Beet, Pea, Cilantro |
| Mar | Bean, Corn, Cucumber, Zucchini, Beet, Carrot, Radish | Tomato, Pepper, Eggplant, Basil | — | Lettuce, Spinach, Pea, Radish, Broccoli, Carrot, Beet, Cilantro |
| Apr | Bean, Corn, Cucumber, Zucchini, SweetPotato | Tomato, Pepper, Eggplant, Basil, SweetPotato | — | Lettuce, Pea, Radish, Broccoli, Onion, Carrot, Beet, Spinach |
| May ← | Bean, Corn, Cucumber, Zucchini | SweetPotato | — | Tomato, Pepper, Zucchini, Cucumber, Bean, Onion, Basil, Eggplant, Beet |
| Jun | — | — | Tomato, Pepper, Eggplant | Tomato, Pepper, Eggplant, Cucumber, Zucchini, Bean, Corn, Basil, SweetPotato |
| Jul | Bean, Corn, Cucumber, Zucchini | Tomato, Pepper, Eggplant, Basil | Broccoli, Kale | Tomato, Pepper, Eggplant, Basil, SweetPotato, Corn |
| Aug | Bean, Cucumber, Zucchini, Beet, Carrot | Broccoli, Kale | — | Tomato, Pepper, Eggplant, Basil, Bean, Corn |
| Sep | Lettuce, Spinach, Radish, Carrot, Beet, Pea, Cilantro | Broccoli, Kale, Lettuce | — | Tomato, Pepper, Eggplant, Bean, Cucumber, Zucchini, Basil |
| Oct | Garlic, Lettuce, Spinach, Radish, Carrot, Beet, Pea, Cilantro, Onion | Broccoli, Kale, Lettuce | — | Tomato, Pepper, Eggplant, Bean, Broccoli, Kale, Lettuce, Basil |
| Nov | Lettuce, Spinach, Radish, Cilantro, Pea | Broccoli, Kale | — | Tomato, Pepper, Lettuce, Spinach, Radish, Broccoli, Kale, Carrot, Beet, Cilantro |
| Dec | Lettuce, Spinach, Radish | — | — | Kale, Lettuce, Spinach, Radish, Broccoli, Carrot, Beet, Cilantro |
Best Vegetables for Victoria
These 10 vegetables are the top picks for Victoria's Pacific Maritime mild climate (Canadian Zone 8b). Each one is well-adapted to the local growing season, frost dates, and soil conditions. Locally productive crops include: year-round brassicas and greens; spring overwintered broad beans, artichokes, and leeks; summer tomatoes, peppers, beans, squash; figs and heat-lovers in sheltered spots.
60-85 days · 10-15 lbs per plant · moderate
Companions: basil, marigold, parsley, carrot
Harvest: Harvest tomatoes when color begins to change from green to their mature color — they will continue to ripen on the counter. For best flavor, never refrigerate tomatoes; instead, place them stem-side down on a countertop out of direct sunlight. If frost threatens, pick all remaining fruit including green tomatoes and ripen them indoors in a paper bag with a banana.
70-90 days · 5-10 peppers per plant · easy
Companions: tomato, basil, carrot, onion
Harvest: Peppers can be picked green for a milder flavor or left on the plant to fully ripen to red, orange, or yellow for maximum sweetness and vitamin C content. Use sharp pruners or scissors to cut the stem rather than pulling, which can damage the branch. Frequent harvesting encourages the plant to produce more fruit throughout the season.
90-120 days · 4-10 lbs per plant · easy
Companions: bean, lettuce, radish, thyme
Harvest: Dig sweet potatoes before the first frost, or when leaves begin to yellow and vines start dying back, typically 90-120 days after transplanting slips. Dig carefully with a garden fork 12-18 inches away from the central stem to avoid slicing the tubers. Cure harvested sweet potatoes at 85°F and high humidity for 7-10 days to develop sweetness and heal skin wounds for long storage.
65-80 days · 4-6 fruits per plant · moderate
Companions: bean, pepper, spinach, thyme, marigold
Harvest: Harvest eggplant when the skin is glossy and firm — press your thumb gently into the fruit, and if the indentation springs back, it is ready. Once the skin turns dull or brownish and seeds inside are dark, the fruit is overripe and will taste bitter. Cut the stem with pruners leaving about an inch of stem attached, and wear gloves if working with prickly varieties.
50-70 days · 10-20 cucumbers per plant · easy
Companions: bean, pea, nasturtium, radish, lettuce
Harvest: Harvest cucumbers before they turn yellow, when they are firm and dark green — overripe cucumbers become bitter and seedy. Pick slicing varieties at 6-8 inches and pickling types at 2-4 inches. Check plants daily during peak production, as cucumbers can double in size in just 24 hours and overgrown fruit signals the plant to stop producing.
50-65 days · 1/2 lb per plant per picking · easy
Companions: corn, cucumber, carrot, lettuce, radish
Harvest: Pick green beans when pods snap cleanly and before seeds visibly bulge through the pod walls. Harvest bush beans every 2-3 days to keep plants producing, and pole beans every day during peak season. Never harvest when foliage is wet, as this spreads bacterial diseases between plants.
45-80 days · 1/2-1 lb per plant · easy
Companions: carrot, radish, onion, strawberry, chive
Harvest: Use the cut-and-come-again method: snip outer leaves at the base when they reach 4-6 inches, leaving the central growing point intact to produce new leaves. For head lettuce, harvest the entire plant when it feels firm. Always harvest in the cool morning hours for the crispest leaves, and watch for bolting — once the central stem elongates, leaves turn bitter.
240-270 days (fall planted) · 1 bulb per clove planted · easy
Companions: tomato, pepper, lettuce, beet, carrot
Harvest: Harvest garlic when the lower 3-4 leaves have turned brown but 4-5 green leaves remain at the top — each green leaf represents one intact wrapper on the bulb. Dig rather than pull the bulbs to avoid breaking the stems. Cure bulbs in a warm, dry, shaded area with good air circulation for 3-4 weeks, then trim the roots and store in mesh bags or braids.
24-28 days to first harvest · 1/2-1 cup fresh leaves per week per plant · easy
Companions: tomato, pepper, oregano, lettuce
Harvest: Pinch or cut stems just above a leaf pair to encourage branching — each cut stem will produce two new growing tips, creating a bushier, more productive plant. Always remove flower buds as soon as they appear, because once basil flowers, the leaves lose their essential oils and turn bitter. For the best flavor, harvest in the morning after dew has dried but before the midday heat.
45-60 days · 6-10 lbs per plant · easy
Companions: corn, bean, nasturtium, radish
Harvest: Harvest zucchini at 6-8 inches long for the best texture and flavor — larger fruit become watery and seedy. Check plants every other day because zucchini grows incredibly fast in warm weather. Use a knife to cut the stem rather than twisting, and leave about an inch of stem attached to help prevent rot.
Spring Vegetable Garden in Victoria
Spring planting in Victoria starts with cool-season crops as soon as soil is workable — often 4-6 weeks before last frost (February 15). Peas, spinach, lettuce, and radishes tolerate light frost. Warm-season crops (tomatoes, peppers, basil, beans, cucumbers) go in after February 15. Start tomatoes and peppers indoors 6-8 weeks before February 15 — that means seed-starting around December 21.
Spring Planting Timeline
- 6-8 weeks before last frost (December 21): start tomatoes, peppers, eggplant indoors
- 4-6 weeks before last frost: direct sow peas, spinach, lettuce, radishes
- 2-3 weeks before last frost: transplant broccoli, kale, onion sets
- On last frost date (February 15): direct sow beans, corn
- 1-2 weeks after last frost: transplant tomato and pepper seedlings
- 2 weeks after last frost: direct sow cucumbers, squash; transplant basil
Fall Vegetable Garden in Victoria
The fall garden in Victoria extends the productive season significantly — and many Canadian gardeners skip it. Fast crops planted in mid to late summer harvest before first frost (December 15). Frost-hardy crops (kale, Brussels sprouts, carrots) actually improve in flavour after light frost as plants concentrate sugars.
Fall Planting Timeline
- Mid-July: start broccoli, cabbage, and kale transplants indoors
- Mid-August: transplant brassicas; direct sow beets, carrots, turnips, radishes
- Late August: direct sow spinach, lettuce, arugula for fall harvest
- September: plant garlic cloves for next-year harvest (July-August following year)
- Early October: last garlic planting before ground freezes; harvest fall brassicas and greens
Garlic is one of the most reliable and rewarding crops for Canadian gardens. Cloves planted in fall develop roots before ground freeze, overwinter under snow or mulch, and produce large heads the following July.
Companion Planting Guide for Victoria
Companion planting maximises your garden's productivity by pairing plants that benefit each other. These combinations are drawn from the top vegetables recommended for Victoria's Canadian Zone 8b. Planting companions together helps repel pests, attract pollinators, improve soil fertility, and make the most of limited garden space.
Common Vegetable Garden Pests in Victoria
Attacks: Lettuce, tender foliage, seedlings
Identify: Irregular holes in leaves with slime trails. Pacific coast's #1 vegetable pest.
Organic control: Copper barriers around beds. Beer traps. Iron phosphate bait. Handpick at night.
Attacks: Squash, cucumbers, zucchini, peas
Identify: White powdery coating on leaves.
Organic control: Milk spray. Improve air circulation. Remove affected leaves. Morning watering only.
Attacks: Tomatoes, peppers, eggplant
Identify: Large green caterpillar with white stripes.
Organic control: Handpick or BT spray.
Attacks: Brassicas
Identify: Velvety green caterpillars.
Organic control: BT spray and row covers.
Attacks: Most vegetables
Identify: Clusters on new growth.
Organic control: Water spray, neem oil, ladybugs.
Soil & Growing Tips for Victoria
The warm-climate garden is defined by two distinct growing seasons: spring warm-season crops from March through June, and a fall garden planted in July through September for fall and winter harvest. The brutal summer heat of June through August makes many crops struggle, so this is the time for heat-tolerant varieties, shade cloth, and heavy mulching. The traditional July 4th tomato planting date for the fall crop is a treasured warm-climate gardening tradition that extends the harvest deep into autumn.
Victoria-specific note: Victoria gardeners can harvest fresh vegetables every month of the year with proper planning. The driest major city in BC — summer irrigation is essential despite the mild climate. Overwintered vegetables (cabbage, kale, leeks, broad beans, garlic) are a Victoria speciality unavailable elsewhere in Canada.
Seed Starting Guide for Victoria
Your last frost date in Victoria is February 15. Use this as your anchor date — count backwards to know when to start seeds indoors.
| Crop | Weeks Before Frost | Start Indoors | Transplant |
|---|---|---|---|
| Tomatoes | 8 weeks | December 21 | 1-2 weeks after last frost |
| Peppers | 10 weeks | December 7 | 2 weeks after last frost |
| Eggplant | 10 weeks | December 7 | 2 weeks after last frost |
| Broccoli | 6 weeks | January 4 | 2-3 weeks before last frost |
| Cabbage | 6 weeks | January 4 | 2-3 weeks before last frost |
| Cucumber | 3 weeks | January 25 | On or just after last frost |
| Squash | 3 weeks | January 25 | After last frost, soil 15°C+ |
| Basil | 4 weeks | January 18 | 2 weeks after last frost |
Based on average last frost of February 15. Actual dates vary year to year — keep frost cloth available until 2 weeks after your average last frost.
Vegetable Storage Guide for Victoria Harvests
Getting the most from your Victoria garden means knowing how to store each harvest. Improper storage is the most common post-harvest mistake.
| Vegetable | Best Storage | Duration | Key Tip |
|---|---|---|---|
| Tomatoes | Room temperature | 1-2 weeks | NEVER refrigerate — destroys texture and flavour |
| Garlic | Dark, dry, ventilated | 6-12 months | Cure 3-4 weeks before storage |
| Onions | Cool, dark, dry | 3-6 months | Don't store near potatoes |
| Winter Squash | Cool, dry | 3-6 months | Cure 10-14 days at 27-30°C first |
| Carrots | Refrigerator in damp bag | 4-6 months | Remove tops before storing |
| Potatoes | Cool, dark, humid | 3-6 months | Cure 1-2 weeks at 13-18°C before long storage |
| Peppers | Refrigerator | 1-2 weeks | Don't wash until ready to use |
| Beans | Refrigerate or freeze | 5 days fresh, 1 year frozen | Blanch before freezing |
| Lettuce | Refrigerator in damp towel | 1-2 weeks | Keep away from ethylene-producing fruits |
| Basil | Room temp in water | 1 week | Never refrigerate — turns black |
Common Garden Mistakes in Victoria
Even experienced gardeners make mistakes. Here are the most common pitfalls for vegetable gardens in Victoria's Pacific Maritime mild climate and how to avoid them.
Only planting one season and missing the fall garden opportunity
Fix: The fall garden is often MORE productive than spring in zones 8-9. Start fall tomato transplants indoors in June and plant out by early July for a second full harvest.
Planting cool-season crops too early in fall when it is still too hot
Fix: Wait until nighttime temperatures drop below 70°F before transplanting broccoli, or direct-sowing lettuce and spinach. Use shade cloth to keep soil cool for germination.
Not providing enough water during extreme summer heat
Fix: Use drip irrigation and 4-6 inches of mulch. Water deeply in the early morning. Container plants may need watering twice daily when temperatures exceed 100°F.
Planting long-day onion varieties instead of short-day varieties
Fix: Zones 8-9 require short-day onion varieties (like 1015Y, Vidalia, or Texas Sweet) that are planted in fall or winter and bulb when day length reaches 10-12 hours.
More Guides for Victoria
Frequently Asked Questions
When should I start planting vegetables in Victoria?
In Victoria (Canadian Zone 8b, Pacific Maritime mild), cool-season crops like lettuce, spinach, and peas can be direct-sown as soon as the soil can be worked in spring — usually 2-4 weeks before the last frost (February 15). Warm-season crops such as tomatoes, peppers, and cucumbers should wait until soil temperature reaches 15°C and all danger of frost has passed. Start tomato and pepper seeds indoors january for tomatoes and peppers; direct sow hardy crops from february and transplant outdoors late march for cool crops, april–may for warm crops.
What are the best vegetables to grow in Victoria, BC?
The top vegetables for Victoria's Pacific Maritime mild climate (Canadian Zone 8b) include year-round brassicas and greens; spring overwintered broad beans, artichokes, and leeks; summer tomatoes, peppers, beans, squash; figs and heat-lovers in sheltered spots. These varieties are well-suited to the local 302-day growing season, frost dates, and soil conditions. See the "Best Vegetables" section above for detailed profiles of each recommended crop.
What Canadian hardiness zone is Victoria, BC?
Victoria is in Canadian Hardiness Zone 8b (roughly equivalent to USDA Zone 8b). This zone determines your frost dates (last spring frost February 15, first fall frost December 15), growing season length of 302 days, and which varieties will thrive in your garden. Canadian hardiness zones differ slightly from USDA zones because they also account for rainfall, snow cover, and other climate factors beyond minimum temperature.
Can I grow a fall vegetable garden in Victoria?
Yes. In Victoria's Zone 8b, cool-season crops like lettuce, spinach, kale, radishes, and broccoli can be planted in mid to late summer for a fall harvest. Count backwards 60-90 days from your first expected fall frost (December 15) to determine your last planting date. Many gardeners find fall-grown greens taste sweeter because cool temperatures convert starches to sugars. Cold frames and row covers extend the fall season another 4-6 weeks.
When should I plant tomatoes in Victoria?
Start tomato seeds indoors january for tomatoes and peppers; direct sow hardy crops from february and transplant late march for cool crops, april–may for warm crops after soil warms to 15°C. Victoria's Pacific Maritime mild climate supports longer-season varieties; heat-loving types that struggle elsewhere in Canada thrive here.
Can I grow vegetables year-round in Victoria?
Yes — Victoria's Zone 8b Pacific Maritime climate supports year-round vegetable production. Hardy brassicas, kale, chard, and spinach produce through winter without protection. Tomatoes, peppers, and other warm-season crops have a long production window from May through October. Winter greens and overwintered vegetables (broad beans, garlic, overwintering brassicas) are a signature Pacific Coast technique.
Does Canadian Zone 8b differ from USDA Zone 8b?
Canadian hardiness zones are calculated using a broader set of climate variables than USDA zones — including rainfall, snow cover, wind, and elevation — in addition to minimum winter temperature. Victoria's Canadian Zone 8b is roughly equivalent to USDA Zone 8b for plant selection purposes. When using American seed catalogs or garden references, check both zone numbers and adjust for the slight differences between the two systems.