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2026 Grow Calendar Β· Arizona

Arizona Outdoor Cannabis Grow Calendar

When to germinate, transplant, flower, and harvest outdoors in Arizona β€” based on local frost dates and climate.

Key Dates at a Glance

🌱

Germinate seeds

February

indoors

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Transplant outdoors

April

after last frost

🌸

Flowering begins

July

photoperiod strains

βœ‚οΈ

Harvest

September

before first frost

USDA Zone

USDA Zones 4b-10b (varies greatly)

Outdoor season: Year-round (with climate control)

Outdoor Viability

Limited β€” indoor recommended

βš–οΈ

Arizona legal limit: 12 plants per person under Proposition 207 (Smart and Safe Arizona Act). Plants must be out of public view.

Full Arizona legal guide β†’

About Growing Outdoors in Arizona

Arizona has extreme heat in the desert regions (Phoenix, Tucson) making outdoor growing very challenging. Summer temps above 100Β°F stress plants significantly. Indoor growing with AC is strongly recommended. Northern Arizona (Flagstaff) is cooler but has short seasons. The desert has excellent light but requires serious climate control.

Month-by-Month Schedule

JanuaryPlanning
  • ●Order seeds from a reputable seed bank
  • ●Plan your grow space and check for any local ordinances
  • ●Prepare soil amendments, pots, and growing supplies
FebruaryGermination & Seedling (Indoor)
Indoor phase
  • ●Germinate seeds (paper towel method or directly in soil)
  • ●Keep under a CFL or small LED on a sunny windowsill
  • ●Maintain warm temps (70-80Β°F) and high humidity (65-70%)
MarchGermination & Seedling (Indoor)
Indoor phase
  • ●Transplant seedlings into 1-gallon pots once they have 3-4 sets of leaves
  • ●Begin gentle hardening off β€” short daily exposure to outdoor conditions
  • ●Monitor for pests and damping off
AprilTransplant Outdoors
  • ●Last frost typically ends: Varies: None in Phoenix to April in Flagstaff
  • ●Transplant outdoors AFTER your local last frost date
  • ●Use 5–10 gallon fabric pots or direct-in-ground for bigger yields
  • ●Protect young plants from strong winds for the first 1-2 weeks
MayVegetative Growth
  • ●Water deeply when top 2 inches of soil are dry
  • ●Feed with balanced veg nutrients (higher N, moderate P/K)
  • ●Top or LST (Low Stress Training) to encourage bushy growth
  • ●Monitor for pests β€” spider mites, aphids, caterpillars
JuneVegetative Growth
  • ●Water deeply when top 2 inches of soil are dry
  • ●Feed with balanced veg nutrients (higher N, moderate P/K)
  • ●Top or LST (Low Stress Training) to encourage bushy growth
  • ●Monitor for pests β€” spider mites, aphids, caterpillars
JulyVegetative Growth
  • ●Water deeply when top 2 inches of soil are dry
  • ●Feed with balanced veg nutrients (higher N, moderate P/K)
  • ●Top or LST (Low Stress Training) to encourage bushy growth
  • ●Monitor for pests β€” spider mites, aphids, caterpillars
AugustFlowering
  • ●Plants enter flower as daylight drops below ~14 hours
  • ●Switch to bloom nutrients (lower N, higher P/K)
  • ●Stake or trellis heavy branches β€” buds get dense and top-heavy
  • ●Watch humidity β€” drop RH below 50% if possible to prevent bud rot
SeptemberHarvest
  • ●First frost typically starts: Varies: None in Phoenix to October in Flagstaff
  • ●Harvest BEFORE first frost β€” frost damages buds
  • ●Check trichomes with a jeweler's loupe β€” cloudy = peak THC
  • ●Flush 1-2 weeks before harvest (plain water only)
  • ●Dry in a dark, cool (60-70Β°F), ventilated space for 7-14 days
OctoberCuring & Off-season
  • ●Cure buds in glass jars β€” burp daily for first 2 weeks
  • ●Minimum 2-4 weeks cure for quality; 6-8 weeks is ideal
  • ●Review notes from this season, order seeds for next year
NovemberCuring & Off-season
  • ●Cure buds in glass jars β€” burp daily for first 2 weeks
  • ●Minimum 2-4 weeks cure for quality; 6-8 weeks is ideal
  • ●Review notes from this season, order seeds for next year
DecemberCuring & Off-season
  • ●Cure buds in glass jars β€” burp daily for first 2 weeks
  • ●Minimum 2-4 weeks cure for quality; 6-8 weeks is ideal
  • ●Review notes from this season, order seeds for next year

Best Outdoor Strains for Arizona

Strain selection matters more outdoors than indoors. Pick a variety matched to Arizona's climate and season length.

Durban Poison

photoperiod

African landrace handles heat better than most strains

Shop seeds β†’

Blue Dream Auto

autoflower

Fast finish for continuous indoor harvests

Shop seeds β†’

Super Lemon Haze

photoperiod

Sativa genetics that tolerate Arizona heat with proper AC

Shop seeds β†’

Pro Tips for Arizona Outdoor Grows

Autoflowers are forgiving

Autoflowers finish in 8-12 weeks regardless of light cycle. In Arizona's shorter outdoor window, this is often the safest choice for beginners.

Watch the last frost

Transplant AFTER Varies: None in Phoenix to April in Flagstaff. A single frost night can kill young plants. When in doubt, wait another week.

Cover if a cold snap comes

Keep row covers or a portable greenhouse ready if your forecast shows unexpected cold nights in early or late season.

Harvest before first frost

Your first frost typically arrives Varies: None in Phoenix to October in Flagstaff. Harvest before this or frost will damage your buds. Check trichomes daily in the final 2-3 weeks.

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