Zone 6 · winter lows -10°F to 0°F
August garden checklist for Zone 6
Every August job that matters, limited to plants that actually survive Zone 6 winters (-10°F to 0°F). Last frost lands around late April.
Plant in August
Plant starts in spring or sow seeds in late summer for next year's bloom
Prune in August
Cut spent flower stalks back to the ground after blooming.
Divide in August
Divide clumps in early fall every 3-4 years if needed.
Fertilize in August
Feed with a balanced liquid fertilizer every 4-6 weeks.
Deadhead in August
Remove spent flowers for tidiness, but leave some cones for winter interest.
Check for Pests in August
Check for yellow oleander aphids; wash off with a strong spray of water.
Propagate in August
Collect seeds from dried pods for next year's planting or allow to self-seed.
Harvest in August
Harvest flowers when fully open for cutting.
What's blooming in August
In flower around now and hardy in Zone 6.
Frost dates and bloom windows are typical ranges, not guarantees — your microclimate moves them by weeks. Sow uses your real local forecast instead.
August questions
What should I be doing in my Zone 6 garden in August?
The jobs that matter most this month are plant, prune, divide, fertilize. Each section above lists the specific plants that need that job in August, filtered to what survives Zone 6 — drawn from the care schedules of the plants gardeners actually grow.
When is the last frost in Zone 6?
In Zone 6, the last spring frost typically lands around late April and the first fall frost around mid-October, with winter lows of -10°F to 0°F. Those two dates bracket most planting decisions — check your local forecast before acting on either, since microclimate and elevation shift them by weeks.
What's blooming in August?
Black-eyed Susan, Lou Williams New England Aster, Trio Butterfly Bush, New England Aster Harringtons Pink, New England Aster 'Violetta' and others are in flower around now in Zone 6. The full list is above.




























































