Climate-based cucumber planting guide for Boise, Idaho
When to Plant Cucumbers in Boise: Timing and Maturity Guide
Cucumbers are usually an easy fit in Boise. The season is generally supportive enough that gardeners can focus more on timing and crop quality than on whether the crop can mature.
Typical Planting Window
Use the planting dates below for cucumbers in Boise.
Gardeners usually either sow outdoors around May 24 or start indoors around April 26 and transplant outdoors around May 24. Most varieties need about 50–60 days to reach maturity.
Cucumbers usually perform comfortably in Boise. The better question here is what turns an acceptable crop into a notably better one.
The local season usually makes this crop easy enough to finish, so the more useful question is what separates an acceptable result from a really good one.
Best local strategy: Plant in the normal window and use the season margin to build healthy plants and a steady picking rhythm.
Can Cucumbers Mature in Boise?
Growing degree days measure how much useful warmth the season provides. For warm-season crops like cucumbers, GDD helps show whether local heat accumulation is usually strong enough for the crop to grow steadily and finish before fall.
From the usual planting window, Boise typically provides about 2863 growing degree days for cucumbers. With a typical crop target of 800, that leaves a heat margin of +2063. That large heat margin means season length is usually not the limiting issue here. The season usually gives gardeners room to focus on finish quality, harvest goals, and overall crop performance.
GDD Checkpoints for Boise
If planting later than usual, this table shows how much growing degree day heat is still available from each point in the season. For cucumbers, it is most useful for judging how much freedom you still have to plant for quality, finish, and harvest goals as the season moves along.
| Checkpoint | Remaining GDD | Heat margin | Fit vs typical target |
|---|---|---|---|
| Apr 15 | 3130 | +2330 | Comfortable |
| May 1 | 3089 | +2289 | Comfortable |
| May 15 | 2984 | +2184 | Comfortable |
| Jun 1 | 2782 | +1982 | Comfortable |
| Jun 15 | 2566 | +1766 | Comfortable |
| Jul 1 | 2249 | +1449 | Comfortable |
Best Cucumber Varieties for Boise
Most cucumber varieties can succeed in Boise in a typical year. That gives gardeners room to choose for the kind of harvest they want, not just for minimum maturity speed.
Varieties that often fit well here include:
- Cool Breeze — an earlier type that is more forgiving where gardeners want a faster start
- Suyo Long — can be productive in a decent season, especially where warmth arrives on time
- Marketmore 76 — a classic slicing cucumber that often fits reasonably well when planted into warmth
- Spacemaster — compact and relatively approachable where gardeners want fast returns
- Straight Eight — productive and well known, but happier when the season is not especially compressed
- Telegraph — better suited to supportive warmth or protected growing
| Variety class | Typical days to maturity | Typical GDD need | Local fit |
|---|---|---|---|
| Very early | 45–50 | 700 | Good fit |
| Early | 50–55 | 800 | Good fit |
| Mid-season | 55–65 | 900 | Good fit |
| Late | 65–75 | 1000 | Good fit |
Main risk: The usual setbacks here come from management choices rather than from the season itself.
How Frost Affects Cucumbers in Boise
Boise usually has about 148 frost-free days, with a typical last spring frost around May 17 and a typical first fall frost around October 12.
Cucumbers are generally frost-tender and temperatures below about 32°F ( 0 °C) can slow growth or damage plants.
Cucumbers are much more exposed to frost risk, so the frost dates matter as real planting boundaries rather than rough planning markers.
The most common problems here are not climatic ones. Gardeners usually lose ground through timing, uneven growth, or letting the crop move past its best stage.
In Boise, cucumbers usually have a solid seasonal margin when planted around May 24. Local gardens do not all warm and cool at the same pace. The warmest garden spots are usually south-facing walls, sheltered gardens, raised beds, and sunnier urban lots. Cooler spots like low spots, exposed sites, and shadier yards tend to warm up later and usually provide less heat. For cucumbers, warmer garden spots usually improve early growth and can make timing a little more forgiving.
Related crops
Related crops worth comparing for the same city:
For a broader local overview, see the Boise planting guide. You can also use the Growing Degree Day Planner to test planting dates and crop timing.