Vegetable Gardening

June Vegetables: What to plant in your Florida Vegetable Garden month by month



Wondering what you should plant in your Florida Vegetable Garden in the month of June? Check out this Florida Gardening Video where I give lots of Florida Gardening Tips to help you have a successful Florida Garden. When you are new to Gardening in Florida, you need all the help you can get so that you start a Florida Food Forest, grow a Central Florida Vegetable Garden, enjoy the best Florida Friendly Landscaping, and add Florida Native Plants.

Seminole Pumpkins https://youtu.be/Pqps-nhKZYs
Sweet Potatoes https://youtu.be/rSGV-2ydmuY
30+ Weeds https://youtu.be/qV2aUhnDwl4
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43 Comments

  1. I grew butternut squash last summer and had a very respectable crop in the fall. My enemy here is stink bugs. Have never been successful growing melons, so this yr I am trying African Horned Cucumber Cucumis metuliferus . We shall see how it does. Located west of Ocala 9a I think.

  2. Brilliant in-depth video! I watch all of yours but this one has my mind vibrating with ideas and tips I forgot 👏

  3. 🤗Great video, you gave me great planting ideas & motivation to get out and plant more. Summer gardening here in FL stresses me out a bit.

  4. Pigeon Peas are a good Florida summer edible plant. Because it is a nitrogen fixer, I mostly plant it to enrich the soil where my winter crops will be planted. The added benefits are that it’s a good pollinator & it’s edible!

  5. St Pete has a garden compost program??! I see what looks like a compost bin in the background. Where can I get more info on this program? My Brevard County area could certainly benefit from such goodness! 😊

  6. Always enjoy and learn from your videos …thank you so much for sharing!! I Garden here in Florida Melbourne/Grant area. I would like to grow the puerto rican black beans but am having trouble finding online. Would appreciate any sources you can lead me to. Thanks in advance!!!

  7. I planted Seminole pumpkin seeds from Baker Creek some look like Seminole pumpkins and some look like butternut squash. I have had a lot of fruit as well as yellow and zucchini squash drop their fruit in the past couple of weeks. I doused with cal/ mag 2 days ago and that evening was our first rain in IDK how long. I am also still killing lubbers. Hopefully some will continue to develop to were we can eat them.

  8. Thank you so much for sharing. When I first started gardening I started in the summer and it failed and almost gave up. I learned to look for Florida gardeners. Thanks again Wild Floridian.

  9. the Jacarandas bloom in Mexico City from mid feb. to mid april although there are a few trees still sending out a few flowers here and there, but you don't find flamboyanes here, it is too cold for them to be happy. When I finally move to my lots in Yucatan it will be the opposite, too hot for jacarandas to be happy. so glad you can have both there.

  10. In canada june is the earliest you can plant to avoid frost lol. Sometimes you can get away with starting in mid may. Sometimes the frost schmehggs everything if you start in may.

  11. Got new starts in the last week of direct sow of cow peas. They came up in 3 days! Also planted direct sowed New Zealand spinach which took weeks to come up but that too is starting to flourish. All in direct sun. I am in Englewood and use a shade on half of a large raised bed from 12pm ish each day. Same thing planted on the complete sun and we'll see which is better.

  12. The 2023 Garden Planner (the old fashioned paper version) is great! Love having something to scribble on and flip back to, and take notes down from your videos! All the info on natives is really unique among Florida garden planners, and I really appreciate the notes about color of bloom, not just times of bloom. This will be a handy reference guide when I am further along in the gardening journey and plant a natives section. And the wildlife sightings! Recording that is a wonderful idea, and help us learn who we are hosting in our garden….right now, I am at the bee, butterfly, bird, and yucky bug stage.
    Couple of ideas that may add to planner's greatness: 1) some way to plan the overall crop rotation by season. The good planting ideas you share on these videos pulled into calendar format so gardeners can plan ahead, source the seeds/cuttings, and the placement in the garden. Maybe a link to the UF/IFAS guide on what to plant when by regions of the state, including whether the plant should be started in trays or direct planted, etc. and the conditions they like. So we can create a seasonal or annual timeline of how our garden spaces will be filled, harvested, and ready for the next round.
    2) References, perhaps to a members-only blog page or other on-line source with plant varieties you recommend, sources, photos of seedlings, growing tips, harvest tips etc. Keeping this on-line will make the info easier to update, and you could perhaps add affiliate links if you feel strongly about the provider. I am not suggesting an exhaustive guide to all edibles and natives for the state; just the Wild Floridian plant journal, if you will, to make it easier for users to fill their planner without searching all of internet.
    3) This section is currently missing, but eventually, a Wild Floridian Fruit guide where you highlight when to plant, prune and fertilize the mulberry, or banana or papaya. Not by month perhaps, but fruit growing should be in every Floridian's garden plan.
    Last picky correction: the tropical plant suggestion, cassava, is yuca, with 1 c, the yucca is another, non-edible plant.
    Thanks for ALL your wonderful work. You are a true inspiration!

  13. I learned to keep it low maintenance in the summer. I need things that strive on neglect in the summer like southern peas and sweet potatoes.

  14. 😊Thanks Jacqueline, i will look into getting a hibiscus 🌺 my Zinnias,and Gazania were taken over by heat exhaustion 😢 They were so pretty too. Oh, well good with the bad in gardening. Have a good weekend.

  15. A friend of mine gave me some luffa seeds. It has taken off!! I'm so excited. I never knew it could be eaten!

  16. It makes me so happy that people in my state care as much as i do about native edible foods and native plants for the pollinating wildlife. I definitely am going to get your planner.

  17. I think im doing cover crops. Im going to be in Houston for July. Not much better heat wise… but still. … my PPark garden will be attended by my 10o son. So i think just cover crops is the way to go!

  18. Maybe I missed it but have you looked into Malabar spinach? I just ordered some seeds, supposed to love the heat!,

  19. Real quick question on the loofah what if you were to run it through a wood chipper and use it as mulch for soil / sand additive Central Florida folks?

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