Outdoor Grow Guide
Best Cannabis Seeds for Outdoor Growing in Mississippi
Your growing season is 251 days. Last frost: Mar 12. First frost: Nov 18. Here are the strains that will actually finish in time.
Find My StrainsLate-season humidity and rainfall create severe bud rot risk. Prioritize mold resistance (4–5) and consider greenhouse protection for any photoperiod strain finishing after mid-September.
Matched Strains
Top Strains for Mississippi
Season Timeline
Mississippi Grow Calendar
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Common Questions
Mississippi Outdoor Growing FAQ
Mississippi's climate is forgiving in some ways, brutal in others
Mississippi sits in USDA hardiness zone 8a (ranging 7a-9a across the state) with an average growing season of 251 days — from last frost around Mar 12 to first frost around Nov 18. The Southeast offers one of the longest outdoor cannabis seasons in the continental US.
The primary constraint for outdoor cannabis growers in Mississippi is late-season humidity. With 77% average summer humidity and 57 inches of annual rainfall, bud rot is a genuine threat for any strain flowering into October.
Late-season humidity and rainfall create severe bud rot risk. Prioritize mold resistance (4–5) and consider greenhouse protection for any photoperiod strain finishing after mid-September.
The 3 challenges specific to Mississippi growers
- Summer heat stress: July and August temperatures regularly exceed 90°F across the Southeast. Cannabis can stall growth, lose potency, and show heat stress symptoms (leaf curling, bleaching) at peak heat. Provide afternoon shade during the hottest weeks.
- Fall humidity and bud rot: The Southeast's humid subtropical climate creates severe bud rot risk for late-finishing photoperiods. Strains finishing after mid-October are at elevated risk. Monitor for mold and harvest at the first sign of infection.
- Pest pressure: Warm winters mean pest populations overwinter successfully. Aphids, spider mites, and caterpillars are common. Integrated pest management from the start of the grow season is essential.
When to start in Mississippi
The Mississippi outdoor season follows a predictable rhythm tied to frost dates:
- Germinate indoors: Around Feb 10 — 30 days before last frost. This gives seedlings time to establish before facing outdoor conditions.
- Transplant outdoors: Around Mar 19, one week after the average last frost passes. Wait for consistent overnight lows above 50°F.
- Vegetative growth: Plants grow vigorously from transplant through mid-July under long summer days (up to 14.1h at solstice).
- Flower trigger: Around July 21, declining day length naturally initiates flowering in photoperiod strains.
- Harvest window: Strain-dependent, but target completion by Nov 4 — 14 days before average first frost — to avoid late-season stress.
Outdoor vs greenhouse in Mississippi
A greenhouse gives Mississippi growers two major advantages: season extension and bud rot protection. Glazed structures allow you to control airflow during the critical late-flowering window, dramatically reducing mold pressure. If you're growing mold-sensitive genetics, or finishing photoperiods that push into October, greenhouse protection is worth the investment.
Legal status of home growing in Mississippi
Home growing laws vary significantly by state and change frequently. Before growing cannabis outdoors in Mississippi, verify the current regulations for your county. Many states that have legalized adult use cannabis still prohibit or limit home cultivation. Always grow within the law — check your state's official cannabis regulatory agency for current rules.
Managing mold in Mississippi
Botrytis cinerea (bud rot/grey mold) is the #1 killer of outdoor cannabis in humid states like Mississippi. It thrives when relative humidity exceeds 70% in the 50–75°F range — exactly the conditions Mississippi delivers in September and October. Once established inside a dense bud, it spreads rapidly and cannot be reversed.
Prevention is the only reliable strategy. Give plants maximum airflow by pruning interior foliage and removing lower branches. Avoid training techniques that create dense, impenetrable canopies. Water in the morning so foliage dries before sunset. At the first sign of gray, fuzzy patches inside buds, harvest immediately — waiting costs the whole plant.







