Zone 5 Coverage
Planting Timeline — All Varieties
Growing Squash & Cucumbers in Zone 5
Zone 5 gardeners hit the sweet spot for squash growing – you have a solid 155-day growing season that's long enough for most varieties to mature, but short enough that you need to choose wisely. The late April frost date means you can get warm-season crops established while still having time for a full harvest before October's first frost. Your climate handles both quick-maturing summer squash and longer-season winter varieties beautifully, though you'll want to prioritize varieties that don't need the extended 120+ day seasons that zones 6-8 can provide.
The key to success in Zone 5 is selecting varieties that make the most of your growing window while tolerating the occasional cool snap that can surprise you in late spring or early fall. Look for squash with days-to-maturity under 110 days, strong disease resistance, and good cold tolerance. Bush varieties often outperform vining types here since they concentrate their energy into earlier production rather than spreading it across a long vine that may not have time to fully mature.
Variety Comparison
| Variety ↑ | Days | Difficulty | Size | Type | Indoor | Harvest |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Acorn Squash (Table Queen) | 85-100 | Easy | 1-2 pounds | Heirloom | April–May | August–October |
| Black Beauty Zucchini | 50-55 | Easy | 6-8 inches long, 2 inches diameter when harvested young | Heirloom | April–May | June–September |
| Burgess Buttercup Squash | 100-110 | Moderate | 3-5 pounds, 6-8 inches across | Heirloom | April–May | August–October |
| Butternut Squash | 100-120 | Easy to Moderate | 2-5 pounds | OP | April–May | August–October |
| Carnival Acorn Squash | 100-110 | Easy to Moderate | 1-2 lbs, 4-6 inches long | Hybrid | — | August–October |
| Cocozelle Italian Heirloom Zucchini | 55-65 | Easy | 6-8 inches long, 2-3 inches diameter | Heirloom | April–August | June–October |
| Delicata Squash | 95-105 | Easy to Moderate | 1-2 pounds, 6-8 inches long | Heirloom | March–April | August–October |
| Honeynut Squash | 100-110 | Moderate | 4-6 inches long, 1-2 pounds | Hybrid | March–April | August–October |
| Hubbard Blue Squash | 100-120 | Moderate | 15-40+ pounds | Heirloom | April–May | August–October |
| Kabocha Winter Squash | 95-105 | Moderate | 2-3 lbs, 5-8 inches diameter | Heirloom | April–May | August–October |
| Pattypan Squash (Sunburst) | 50-60 | Easy | 3-4 inches across when harvested young | Hybrid | April–May | June–September |
| Spaghetti Squash | 90-110 | Easy to Moderate | 2-4 pounds, 8-10 inches long | OP | April–May | August–October |
| Sugar Pie Pumpkin | 100-110 | Easy | 6-8 inches diameter, 3-7 lbs | Heirloom | — | August–October |
| Table King Bush Acorn Squash | 85-95 | Moderate | 1-2 pounds, 5-6 inches across | Hybrid | April–May | July–September |
| Tromboncino Squash | 60 days for summer use, 110-120 for winter storage | Moderate | 12-24 inches long, curved neck shape | Heirloom | — | July–October |
| Vegetable Marrow (Long Green Trailing) | 60-80 (young), 100+ (mature marrow) | Moderate | 18-36 inches long, 10-20+ pounds when fully mature | Heirloom | April–May | July–October |
| Waltham Butternut Squash | 100-120 | Moderate | 3-5 pounds, 8-12 inches long | Heirloom | March–April | August–October |
| Yellow Crookneck Summer Squash | 50-65 | Easy | 6-8 inches long when harvested young | Heirloom | — | June–October |
| Yellow Straightneck Zucchini | 48-55 | Easy | 6-8 inches long when harvested young | Hybrid | — | June–October |
| Yellow Summer Squash (Early Prolific Straightneck) | 50-55 | Easy | 6-8 inches long, 2-3 inches diameter | Hybrid | April–May | June–October |
Variety Details

Acorn Squash (Table Queen)
A compact winter squash perfect for small gardens and new gardeners, producing reliable harvests of ribbed, acorn-shaped fruits. Its mild, slightly sweet flesh and convenient single-serving size make it ideal for stuffing and roasting. This dependable variety has been a American garden staple since the early 1900s.

Black Beauty Zucchini
The gold standard of summer squash varieties, beloved by gardeners for over 80 years for its reliable production and classic zucchini flavor. This vigorous heirloom produces an abundance of glossy, dark green fruits that are perfect for everything from zucchini bread to grilled vegetables. Known for its exceptional productivity and tender texture when harvested young.
Burgess Buttercup Squash
Often called the most delicious winter squash available, this Japanese variety produces turban-shaped fruits with incredibly sweet, creamy flesh that rivals sweet potatoes in flavor. The distinctive gray-green skin with darker stripes makes it easy to identify, while the bright orange interior delivers consistent, exceptional taste that converts even squash skeptics. Its excellent storage ability means you can enjoy this premium squash well into winter.

Butternut Squash
The king of winter squashes, beloved for its sweet, nutty flesh and incredible versatility in the kitchen. This vigorous vine produces tan-colored, bell-shaped fruits that store for months, making it a homesteader's dream. Its smooth texture and rich flavor make it perfect for soups, roasts, and countless autumn recipes.

Carnival Acorn Squash
A stunning hybrid that looks like a painter's masterpiece with cream-colored base decorated with green and orange stripes and splashes. Beyond its incredible beauty, it offers sweet, nutty flesh that's perfect for stuffing and the compact size is ideal for small families. This variety turns heads at farmers markets and dinner tables alike.
Cocozelle Italian Heirloom Zucchini
An Italian heirloom dating back to the 1890s, this distinctive zucchini stands out with its beautiful striped pattern and superior flavor that puts modern varieties to shame. The dark green fruits with light green stripes have incredibly tender skin when young and dense, flavorful flesh that holds up beautifully in cooking. This variety embodies the authentic taste of traditional Italian cooking.
Delicata Squash
The 'sweet potato squash' that's taking home kitchens by storm with its edible skin and incredibly sweet flesh. This cream-colored beauty with distinctive green stripes offers the convenience of summer squash with the rich flavor of winter squash. Its compact vines and reliable production make it perfect for smaller gardens.

Honeynut Squash
A miniature butternut-type squash that packs incredible concentrated sweetness into personal-sized portions, often called 'nature's candy' by chefs and home cooks alike. This relatively new variety was developed at Cornell University and has quickly become a gourmet favorite for its intense flavor that's 3x sweeter than regular butternut squash. Perfect for individual servings and roasts beautifully whole, making it ideal for elegant dinner presentations.

Hubbard Blue Squash
A massive heirloom winter squash that can reach 40+ pounds, prized for its incredible storage life and sweet, fine-textured orange flesh. This impressive variety with its distinctive blue-gray bumpy skin has been a homestead favorite since the 1890s, providing months of nutritious meals from a single harvest. The ultimate storage squash that gets sweeter with time and can last 6-8 months when properly cured.

Kabocha Winter Squash
Often called Japanese pumpkin, this incredibly sweet winter squash has a texture like sweet potato and chestnut combined. The dense, bright orange flesh is naturally creamy and requires no butter or seasoning to be absolutely delicious. A favorite among chefs and health-conscious gardeners.
Pattypan Squash (Sunburst)
A cheerful hybrid summer squash that looks like little flying saucers in bright yellow with distinctive scalloped edges that make every harvest feel festive. This compact, productive variety is perfect for small gardens and containers, producing tender, buttery-flavored fruits that are as beautiful as they are delicious. The unique UFO shape and vibrant color make it a favorite for farmers markets and gourmet cooking.

Spaghetti Squash
The miraculous squash that transforms into pasta-like strands when cooked, making it a favorite among health-conscious gardeners and low-carb enthusiasts. This oblong, yellow winter squash is surprisingly easy to grow and stores well for months. Its unique flesh separates into spaghetti-like strings that make an excellent substitute for traditional pasta.

Sugar Pie Pumpkin
The gold standard for homemade pumpkin pie and fall baking. These compact, sweet pumpkins produce thick, smooth flesh that's naturally creamy without being watery. Perfect size for small families and much more flavorful than store-bought canned pumpkin.

Table King Bush Acorn Squash
A space-saving bush variety that delivers all the classic acorn squash flavor without the sprawling vines. This compact plant produces perfectly proportioned, single-serving acorn squashes with deep ridges and sweet, orange flesh that becomes incredibly tender when roasted. Its bush habit makes it perfect for smaller gardens while still providing excellent yields.

Tromboncino Squash
An Italian heirloom that's part sculpture, part vegetable with its incredible curved neck resembling a trombone. This vigorous climbing vine can be eaten young like zucchini or left to mature into a sweet winter squash. Its unique growth habit and dual-purpose nature make it a fascinating conversation starter in any garden.

Vegetable Marrow (Long Green Trailing)
A traditional British heirloom that produces enormous, prize-winning fruits that can reach 2-3 feet long and provide abundant harvests for large families or competitive gardening. This vigorous trailing variety is perfect for gardeners who want to grow something truly impressive, with its ability to produce marrows weighing 10+ pounds from compact plants. The mild, versatile flesh is excellent stuffed, in soups, or as a potato substitute in traditional British cooking.

Waltham Butternut Squash
The improved version of the classic butternut that every gardener should grow, developed at Waltham Field Station for better northern climate adaptation and disease resistance. This variety produces larger, more uniform fruits with thicker necks and smaller seed cavities, meaning more usable flesh per squash. Its exceptional storage life and reliable germination in cooler conditions make it the gold standard for home gardeners.

Yellow Crookneck Summer Squash
A prolific summer favorite that embodies the abundance of warm-weather gardening with its curved neck and bumpy, golden skin. This fast-growing bush variety produces tender, mild-flavored squash continuously throughout the season when harvested young. Its distinctive shape and reliable production have made it a garden staple for generations.

Yellow Straightneck Zucchini
A prolific summer squash that produces straight, bright yellow fruits perfect for beginners and experienced gardeners alike. Unlike crookneck varieties, these stay straight making them easier to slice and store. The tender skin and mild flesh make them incredibly versatile in the kitchen.

Yellow Summer Squash (Early Prolific Straightneck)
A classic summer squash that's been a garden staple for generations, prized for its reliability and continuous production. This variety produces smooth, bright yellow fruits with tender skin and mild, buttery flesh that's perfect for everything from grilling to baking. Its compact bush habit and early maturity make it ideal for gardeners who want fresh squash all season long.
Zone 5 Growing Tips
Start your squash seeds indoors 2-3 weeks before your last frost date (early to mid-April), but don't rush to transplant – wait until soil temperature consistently hits 60°F, usually 1-2 weeks after your frost date in mid-May. Squash are notoriously sensitive to cold soil and will sulk or develop poorly if transplanted too early. Use black plastic mulch or row covers to warm the soil faster and extend your season on both ends.
Zone 5's shorter season means every week counts, especially for winter squash. Focus on succession planting summer varieties every 2 weeks through June to maintain harvest, but get your winter squash in the ground by early June at the latest. Powdery mildew and cucumber beetles can be particular challenges in your humid summers, so choose resistant varieties when possible and be prepared with floating row covers for pest protection during the vulnerable seedling stage.
Season Overview
Your April 30th average last frost and October 5th first frost give you about 155 growing days – perfect for 90% of squash varieties with some strategic planning. This timeline means you can start seeds indoors in early April, transplant in mid-May, and harvest summer squash from July through September while winter squash finish maturing in September for storage. The key is remembering that 'days to maturity' counts from transplant, not from seed, so a 100-day winter squash planted May 15th will be ready by late August with time to spare before frost threatens.