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Gardening  ·  April 2026

Your April-May Garden To-Do List for South Florida

While the rest of the country is just waking up, South Florida gardeners are shifting gears — wrapping up the cool season and bracing for the heat and rain to come.

By digman  ·  4 min read

Gardening in South Florida operates on its own clock. April and May mark the end of the dry season and the approach of the summer wet season — and for gardeners, that transition changes everything. This is the moment to harvest what’s left of the cool-season garden, prepare for the punishing heat of June through September, and get warm-season tropicals and natives established before the rains arrive.

Think of it less as spring planting and more as spring pivoting.

Wrap up the cool-season vegetable garden

If you’ve been growing tomatoes, peppers, squash, beans, or cucumbers through the winter and early spring, April is their last hurrah. As temperatures push reliably into the 90s and humidity climbs, most vegetables will bolt, stop setting fruit, or succumb to fungal disease. Harvest everything you can, pull spent plants, and add them to the compost pile.

Don’t feel defeated — this is just how the South Florida vegetable calendar works. Your next vegetable planting window opens again in October.

Heads up: Tomatoes stop setting fruit when nighttime temps stay above 75°F. If your plants are still flowering in late April but not fruiting, that’s why. The heat has closed the window — harvest what’s there and move on.

What you can still plant now

April and May aren’t a planting dead zone — they’re just tropical planting season. Heat-loving plants that would struggle in cooler climates absolutely thrive in what’s coming. Focus on tropicals, natives, and anything that loves humidity.

Dig tip: Plant new trees and shrubs just before the rainy season starts — typically late May or early June. The summer rains do the watering work for you during the critical establishment period, and you won’t be hauling a hose through 95 degree heat.

Lawn and landscape tasks

April is one of the best months to fertilize your lawn in South Florida. St. Augustine, Bahia, and Zoysia grasses are all actively growing and will make excellent use of a slow-release fertilizer right now. Follow the Florida-friendly guidelines and avoid high-phosphorus formulas — South Florida soils are naturally phosphorus-rich and excess runoff harms local waterways.

Check your irrigation system before the dry season fully peaks. Adjust heads, fix leaks, and make sure coverage is even — you’ll be relying on it heavily through May until the rains take over. Once the wet season starts in earnest, dial back irrigation or your lawn will develop fungal issues.

Pest and disease watch

Whiteflies, aphids, and scale insects all ramp up as temperatures rise. Check the undersides of leaves on your citrus, vegetables, and ornamentals. A strong blast of water knocks back aphids; neem oil handles most soft-bodied pests without harming beneficial insects if applied in the evening when pollinators are not active.

Citrus greening (HLB) remains a serious threat across South Florida. There’s no cure, but keeping trees healthy and well-fertilized with a micronutrient-rich citrus fertilizer gives them the best chance. If leaves are showing yellow mottling or fruit is lopsided and bitter, have a sample tested through your county extension office.

Fungal disease season is coming: High heat plus summer humidity is perfect for fungal disease — powdery mildew, root rot, and leaf spot all peak in summer. Improve air circulation by pruning dense shrubs now, avoid overhead watering, and mulch beds to reduce soil splash onto leaves.

Your April-May checklist

South Florida gardening in April and May is about reading the season honestly. The cool-season window is closing, but a whole new palette of tropical abundance is opening up. Embrace what grows here naturally — native plants, tropical fruits, shade-loving foliage — and your garden will thrive in ways that gardeners in colder climates can only dream about.

#checklist #gardening Dig
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