Harvest, Alabama Weather
Cicadas claim the scorching afternoon. Day 14 of summer. Read this microseason across nine climate regions →
Harvest weather forecast — hour by hour, 7-day outlook, NOAA radar
- TodayJul 4Overcast——91°69°—
- SundayJul 5Heavy Rain21%0.61″92°73°+1°
- MondayJul 6Thunderstorm58%0.06″84°70°-8°
- TuesdayJul 7Drizzle24%—84°69°0°
- WednesdayJul 8Overcast11%—86°66°+2°
- ThursdayJul 9Light Drizzle21%—89°68°+3°
- FridayJul 10Light Drizzle53%—88°71°-1°
AQI 77 (Moderate), driven by Ozone. AQI up 37 in the last 6 hours — air quality is degrading. Ozone at AQI 100 — peak already passed at 1 PM under partly cloudy skies. Levels should ease through evening.
OK No precautions needed for the general population; unusually sensitive individuals may consider limiting prolonged outdoor exertion.
What's driving it
Ozone × UV × Sky
Ozone at AQI 100 — peak already passed at 1 PM under partly cloudy skies. Levels should ease through evening.
- Present
- AQI 100
- UV peak
- 3.9 at earlier today
- Sky at peak
- partly cloudy
- Projected peak
- AQI 100
PM × Wind × Precip
PM2.5 at 10.8 µg/m³ (AQI 54) with a 0.79 fine-to-coarse ratio and 4 mph wind — combustion smoke trapped in calm air, not road dust.
- PM2.5/PM10
- 0.79
- Wind
- calm
- Recent rain
- 0h in last 6h
- Pattern
- stagnant smoke
Trends
Seven days of AQI and PM2.5.
Hourly air-quality data from the Copernicus Atmosphere Monitoring Service, charted across the past and next several days. Dashed lines mark the AQI breakpoints at 50 (Good → Moderate) and 100 (Moderate → Unhealthy for Sensitive Groups).








































If the first of July be rainy weather, 'twill rain more or less for four weeks together.
- Moonrise
- 10:35 PM
- Moonset
- 9:58 AM
- In sign
- ♓︎ Pisces
Cicadas claim the scorching afternoon
Harvest at a glance
- Today vs. normal: 14°F above the seasonal normal for this latitude
- Last frost: March 16 (climatological average for this latitude)
- Microseason: Jul 1–5
- Planting window: Harvest early potatoes. Begin drying onions on the surface.
ZIP code: 35749
16-Day Forecast — Harvest
- Sat91°69°9%
- Sun92°73°21%
- Mon84°70°58%
- Tue84°69°24%
- Wed86°66°11%
- Thu89°68°21%
- Fri88°71°53%
- Sat82°70°48%
- Sun80°63°34%
- Mon78°57°18%
- Tue80°59°18%
- Wed84°62°33%
- Thu78°69°41%
- Fri86°68°65%
- Sat79°70°49%
- Sun83°69°46%
Forecast data from Open-Meteo (CC BY 4.0).
Right now in the garden
Peak growing season
As of July 4, the growing season is at its peak — frost is months away. Continue succession-planting beans and summer squash. Start fall brassicas (broccoli, cabbage, kale) from seed indoors for transplanting in late summer.
SPC Convective Outlook
Storm Prediction Center — Harvest
SPC has placed Harvest in the Marginal Risk category for severe thunderstorms tomorrow.
- TODAYTSTMGeneral Thunderstorms
- TOMORROWMRGLMarginal Risk
- DAY 3TSTMGeneral Thunderstorms
Isolated severe storms possible. Limited threat for hail or damaging wind.
Source: NOAA / NWS Storm Prediction Center categorical convective outlook. Outlooks are re-issued multiple times per day; this page reflects the most recent SPC polygons covering the city’s coordinates.
Microseason · July 1–5
Cicadas claim the scorching afternoon
Dog-day cicadas emerge in waves, their rasp dominating every sunny hour; heat peaks above 90 degrees daily.
Day 185 of 365 · Wedge 37 of 72
Planting calendar
| Month | Plant | Harvest |
|---|---|---|
| January | — | — |
| February | — | — |
| March | lettuce, peas, spinach, radishes | — |
| April | lettuce, peas, spinach, radishes, tomatoes, peppers, beans, squash | — |
| May | tomatoes, peppers, beans, squash | lettuce, peas, radishes |
| June | tomatoes, peppers, beans, squash | lettuce, peas, radishes |
| July | — | tomatoes, beans, summer squash |
| August | — | tomatoes, beans, summer squash |
| September | — | tomatoes, beans, summer squash |
| October | fall brassicas, garlic (overwinter), carrots | winter squash, tomatoes (last) |
| November | fall brassicas, garlic (overwinter), carrots | — |
| December | — | — |
A year in weather
In Harvest, July runs warmest near 81°F and January coldest around 43°F, while December is the wettest month (5.9 inches) and September the driest (3.5 inches).
| Month | Mean temp | Precip | Rainy days |
|---|---|---|---|
| January | 43° | 5.0″ | 7 |
| February | 47° | 5.1″ | 8 |
| March | 54° | 5.4″ | 8 |
| April | 63° | 4.9″ | 7 |
| May | 71° | 4.7″ | 7 |
| June | 79° | 4.1″ | 7 |
| July | 81° | 4.5″ | 7 |
| August | 81° | 3.5″ | 6 |
| September | 75° | 3.5″ | 4 |
| October | 64° | 3.6″ | 5 |
| November | 53° | 4.3″ | 6 |
| December | 46° | 5.9″ | 7 |
Regional context
Harvest's climate, from NOAA NCEI 1991-2020 station normals, pairs 43°F Januarys with 81°F Julys — a 39°F swing. About 54.3 inches of precipitation falls over roughly 79 days a year.
Rainfall in Harvest stays even across the calendar: December tops out at 5.9 inches over 7.3 rainy days, and September still logs 3.5 inches across 4.4 — a narrow range for Harvest. It is a balanced pattern Harvest shares with places like Madison, AL, Ardmore, AL and Meridianville, AL.
By mid-March the frosts ease in Harvest, opening the season for peas, lettuce, spinach, and radishes. Warm-soil crops in Harvest wait about two weeks past Harvest's last frost, once the soil warms. Around mid-December, freezing nights resume in Harvest and tender crops must come in. In Harvest, low spots run 4-7°F colder than nearby slopes, nudging Harvest's frost dates a week.
Similar climates: Madison, AL, Ardmore, AL, Meridianville, AL, Hazel Green, AL, Athens, AL.
Frequently asked
- When does it freeze in Harvest?
- In Harvest, expect the last spring frost near mid-March; Harvest's first autumn frost comes around mid-December.
- What is the rainy season in Harvest?
- Harvest sees its heaviest rain in December (around 5.9 inches), part of roughly 54 inches a year.
- What is the warmest month in Harvest?
- July is Harvest's warmest month, averaging about 81°F.
- What is the coldest month in Harvest?
- Harvest bottoms out in January, with a mean near 43°F.
- When can I start a vegetable garden in Harvest?
- Time tomatoes in Harvest for two weeks after mid-March; peas and greens start at Harvest's frost line.
- How many rainy days does Harvest get?
- Expect roughly 79 wet days a year in Harvest.
- What hardiness zone is Harvest?
- Harvest's hardiness zone tracks its winter low; with January near 43°F, check the USDA ZIP map for the exact zone.
- What is the 10-day forecast for Harvest?
- Harvest's extended outlook — daily high and low temperatures and precipitation chances for each upcoming day — is in the daily forecast above.
- Will it rain this week in Harvest?
- See this week's day-by-day rain chances for Harvest in the daily forecast above, and the next 24 hours in the hourly chart.
- What is the weather like right now in Harvest?
- Current conditions for Harvest and the next 24 hours — temperature, precipitation chance, and wind by the hour — are in the hourly forecast chart above.
- How often is the Harvest forecast updated?
- The Harvest forecast on this page is built from Open-Meteo weather-model data and refreshes regularly through the day.
- When are sunrise and sunset in Harvest?
- Today's sunrise and sunset times for Harvest are in the Almanac section above, along with civil dawn, civil dusk, and day length. Day length is longest near the summer solstice and shortest near the winter solstice.
- How accurate is the weather forecast for Harvest?
- The next few days in Harvest's forecast are the most reliable; accuracy declines beyond about a week as weather-model uncertainty grows.
Climate
Harvest, Alabama has a humid subtropical climate: January averages roughly 43°F, July about 81°F, 38°F between them.
Across the year, Harvest collects about 54 inches of precipitation over roughly 79 days with measurable rain or snow.
Latitude 34.9°N gives Harvest its 38°F swing, and with it the rhythm of Harvest's growing season.
ZIP codes in Harvest
- 35749