Part 3 of 3 – Hardening Off and Transplanting into the Garden
by Marcia Kirinus, NC State Extension Master GardenerSM volunteer of Durham County
This article is part three of a three-part series on starting seeds indoors using a light cart. In Part One, we focused on lighting and environmental setup, building the foundation for strong, healthy growth. Find it here.
In Part Two, we covered watering, fertility, and pest management — the daily disciplines that produce healthy root systems and balanced seedlings. Find it here.
Now we arrive at the final step: moving plants from a protected indoor environment, where nearly everything is controlled, into the garden – where nature takes over.
If seedlings could talk, this is what they would say: “I’m ready – but don’t rush me.”
Basil, (Ocimum basilicum), seedlings beginning the hardening-off process in bright shade. Early exposure is brief and protected, allowing leaves and stems to adjust gradually to sun, wind, and fluctuating temperatures. (Image Credit: Marcia Kirinus)
On your light cart, you controlled light, moisture, airflow, and nutrition. In the garden, you enter into partnership with weather, soil microbes, insects, and natural variability. If you have built strong roots, managed moisture wisely, and avoided excess fertility, your seedlings are prepared.
Hardening Off – Why it matters
Seedlings grown indoors live sheltered lives. Water and nutrients arrive on schedule. Light is steady. Temperatures are moderate. There is no harsh wind or intense ultraviolet exposure. Then one spring afternoon, we carry them into full sun, fluctuating temperatures, drying winds, and real UV radiation.
Without preparation, that abrupt shift can cause leaf scorch, wilting, stalled growth, transplant shock, and lasting setbacks. Hardening off is not optional, it is a physiological transition. During hardening off, plants thicken their leaf cuticle, strengthen cell walls, and adjust stomatal function to regulate water loss under changing conditions. You are not simply “getting them used to it.” You are allowing them time to rebuild tissues for outdoor survival.
This takes days, not hours.
Hardening Off – How To Do It
Hardening off is the gradual introduction of seedlings to outdoor conditions over 7–10 days, depending on weather and crop type. The goal is progressive exposure, not endurance.
Days 1–2:
1–2 hours outdoors in bright shade, protected from wind.
Days 3–4:
3–4 hours outdoors. Introduce gentle morning sun.
Days 5–6:
Half day outdoors, increasing light gradually.
Days 7–10:
Full days outside. Bring plants inside if nighttime temperatures fall below crop tolerance or if strong winds or heavy rain are forecast.
Observe daily. Slight wilting is feedback. Leaf bleaching is a warning.
Leaf bleaching on Capsicum annuum caused by direct sun exposure without proper hardening off. Rapid ultraviolet exposure damages indoor-grown tissue before it has time to adapt. (Image generated for educational purposes.)
The Role of Wind
Indoors, air is still. Outdoors, wind creates mechanical stress that stimulates stronger stems through thigmomorphogenesis. Moderate movement encourages thicker, sturdier growth. This is why gentle air circulation on a light cart – or lightly brushing seedlings when young, improves transplant success. It prepares plants before they ever leave the house.
Transplant Size – When Are They Ready?
Height alone does not determine readiness. Structure does. Look for seedlings with two to four sets of true leaves, sturdy upright stems, and well-developed roots that hold the soil together when gently removed from the tray. Leaves should be evenly dark green, with no signs of pests or disease. A plant that appears small but strong will consistently outperform one that is tall and leggy.


Seedlings are ready for the garden when they have multiple sets of true leaves, sturdy stems, and a well-developed root system. Balanced structure signals readiness. (Image credit: Marcia Kirinus)
Timing the Move to the Garden
In Durham, NC (USDA Zone 8a), the average last spring frost falls around April 10 – but averages are not guarantees. Light frosts may occur later, especially in low-lying areas. Cool-season crops such as lettuce, brassicas, and snapdragons tolerate cold and can often be transplanted several weeks before the last frost, provided they have been properly hardened off.
Warm-season crops – tomatoes, peppers, zinnias, basil – require patience. Wait until nighttime temperatures remain consistently above 50°F and soil temperatures have warmed. Air may feel pleasant on a sunny day, but soil temperature lags behind. Roots respond to soil temperature.
If uncertain, delay warm-season planting by a week. In our region, transplants set into warm late-April soil frequently outperform those planted too early into cold ground. Microclimates matter. South-facing walls, raised beds, and protected urban spaces warm faster than open exposures. Know your yard before planting.
Transplanting into the Garden.
How you transplant matters as much as when.
- Prepare the Soil
- Loosen soil thoroughly, ensure good drainage, and incorporate compost if needed. If soil is dry, water the planting area before transplanting.
- Choose the right time
- Late afternoon or early evening is ideal, allowing plants to recover overnight before facing full sun. Avoid midday heat or high-wind conditions.
- Handle Roots Gently
- Well-watered seedlings release from trays more easily and experience less root disturbance.
- Water before removal.
- Support the root ball – never pull by the stem.
- Keep roots shaded and moist until planted.
- If roots are circling heavily, gently loosen them.
- Plant at Proper Depth
- Most crops should be planted at the same depth they grew indoors. Tomatoes are the exception and can be planted deeper to encourage adventitious rooting.
- Water In Thoroughly
- Water immediately after planting to eliminate air pockets and ensure firm soil-to-root contact. Even if soil feels moist, this step is essential for establishing roots in their new environment.



Soil preparation, gentle handling and careful watering are the final steps in successful transplanting. Loosened soil promotes root expansion, planting to the right depth and watering at the base of the plant ensures strong soil-to-root contact. (Images Generated for Educational Purposes)
Extra Insurance: Row Covers, Cold Frames, Cloches, and Mulch
Even properly hardened seedlings benefit from temporary protection during early establishment. In Durham’s unpredictable spring weather, lightweight floating row cover offers insurance against late frosts, drying winds, temperature swings, and early insect pressure. Row covers moderate extremes rather than eliminating exposure. Remove covers once plants resume active growth and temperatures stabilize.


Left: Lightweight row cover protects cool-season crops from wind, heavy rain, and fluctuating temperatures while slightly increasing warmth beneath the canopy. Right: When uncovered, Scabiosa atropurpurea appears frosted but remains healthy – gradual acclimation allows plants to tolerate short cold events. (Image credit: Marcia Kirinus)
Cold frames, cloches, and heavy mulch serve a similar purpose. Each buffers conditions while plants adjust to their new environment. Protection is not about eliminating stress. It is about moderating extremes while roots establish and tissues strengthen.


Left: A simple cold frame allows controlled ventilation and incremental exposure to outdoor conditions. Right: Cloches protect individual plants as they settle into the garden.(Image credit: Marcia Kirinus)
Bringing it Full Circle
The techniques described throughout this three-part series – intentional lighting, disciplined watering, restrained fertilizing, gradual hardening off, and careful transplant timing – are the same practices we use to grow plants for the Durham Extension Master Gardener℠ Volunteer Plant Sale on April 11, 2026.
Every plant offered has been raised using these science-based methods to ensure strong root systems, balanced growth, and successful establishment in your garden. When you bring one home, you are starting with a seedling that has been prepared – Slow grown, not rushed.
Final Takeaway
Hardening off and transplanting are measured transitions. The goal is not speed; it is continuity. A well-grown seedling moved thoughtfully into appropriate soil does not struggle – it adapts. Once established, it quickly outpaces plants that were rushed or transplanted carelessly. The discipline practiced indoors – managing light, moisture, airflow, and fertility – now pays dividends in the garden. From light cart to soil, each step builds resilience.
Resources and Additional Information:
Past Blog Post: Starting Seeds Indoors with a Light Cart: A Science-Based Guide, Setting everything up. (Part 1 of 3) https://wp.me/p2nIr1-6UX
Past Blog Post: Starting Seeds Indoors using a Light Cart: A Science Based Guide, water, fertilizer, pest control (Part 2 of 3) https://wp.me/p2nIr1-73H
Past Blog Post: What I love about starting seeds using a soil block: https://wp.me/p2nIr1-4rv
How to build your own raised bed cloche: University of Oregon: https://extension.oregonstate.edu/catalog/ec-1627-how-build-your-own-raised-bed-cloche?reference=catalog
Extending the growing season: start early, end later: University of Minnesota, https://durhammastergardeners.com/wp-admin/post.php?post=27417&action=edit
North Carolina Extension Gardener Handbook, Appendix E. Season Extenders and Greenhouses, https://content.ces.ncsu.edu/extension-gardener-handbook/appendix-e-season-extenders-and-greenhouses
Article Short Link: https://wp.me/p2nIr1-78d









