🌱 Pea Sunlight Calculator
Find out exactly how much sun your pea plants need based on type, climate, and garden conditions
| Pea Type | Category | Min Sun (hrs) | Ideal Sun (hrs) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Garden / Shelling | Edible | 6 | 6–8 |
| Sugar Snap | Edible | 6 | 6–8 |
| Snow Pea | Edible | 6 | 6–8 |
| Black-Eyed Pea | Edible (warm) | 8 | 8–10 |
| Field / Dry Pea | Edible (dry) | 6 | 6–8 |
| Sweet Pea | Ornamental | 6 | 6–8 |
| Climate Zone | Avg Summer Temp | Sun Adjustment | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Hot (90°F+ / 32°C+) | 90°F+ / 32°C+ | Provide afternoon shade | Peas struggle above 85°F; shade cloth recommended |
| Warm (80–90°F) | 80–90°F / 27–32°C | Morning sun preferred | Plant early spring or fall to avoid peak heat |
| Moderate (70–80°F) | 70–80°F / 21–27°C | Full sun ideal | Best growing zone for most pea types |
| Cool (60–70°F) | 60–70°F / 16–21°C | Full sun beneficial | Peas thrive here; maximize exposure for faster growth |
| Pea Type | In-Row Spacing (in) | Row Spacing (in) | Area Per Plant (ft²) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Garden / Shelling | 2–4 | 18–24 | 0.25–0.67 |
| Sugar Snap | 3–4 | 18–24 | 0.38–0.67 |
| Snow Pea | 2–3 | 18–24 | 0.25–0.50 |
| Black-Eyed Pea | 3–4 | 24–36 | 0.50–1.00 |
| Field / Dry Pea | 2–3 | 18–24 | 0.25–0.50 |
| Sweet Pea | 6–8 | 12–18 | 0.50–1.00 |
| Pea Type | Days to Maturity | Total Sun Hours Needed | Yield Per Plant |
|---|---|---|---|
| Garden / Shelling | 60–70 days | 360–560 hrs | 2–3 lbs (0.9–1.4 kg) |
| Sugar Snap | 58–70 days | 348–560 hrs | 2–3 lbs (0.9–1.4 kg) |
| Snow Pea | 55–65 days | 330–520 hrs | 1.5–2.5 lbs (0.7–1.1 kg) |
| Black-Eyed Pea | 70–80 days | 560–800 hrs | 1–2 lbs (0.5–0.9 kg) |
| Field / Dry Pea | 80–100 days | 480–800 hrs | 0.5–1 lb dry (0.2–0.5 kg) |
| Sweet Pea | 65–80 days | 390–640 hrs | Flowers only (ornamental) |
Sunshine is needed for growing healthy Peas in the garden. They really need around six to eight hours of direct sunshine daily. When Peas receive enough light, they grow more quickly and give more pods.
Green vegetables can get by with only four hours, but Peas work differently, they do not reach their best without more light than that. Many gardening folks commonly underrate the space.
How Much Sun Do Peas Need
Peas in the garden benefit most in full Sun, which means more than six hours of direct light daily. They can handle partial shade, naturally, but the growth will become slower and the harvest less plentiful. Morning sunshine most helps for Peas, because it brings gentle heat without the burning afternoon force.
Spots that catch the mornign light and later a bit of shade in the afternoon work well, especially if you garden in a warm region.
Fixed types of Peas grow well with around six hours of sunshine a day. They enjoy full Sun, but they also handle little afternoon shade. Sweet Peas like Sun, they thirst in Sun and require at least six hours of direct light.
If you grow sweet Peas indoors, an east window allows the gentle morning light. In the Northern Hemisphere a south window gives the most strong and lasting sunshine all day.
Here the spot where causes become tricky. Heat really is the enemy hear. Peas like cool conditions, and too much heat makes them weak and unhappy.
Spring and autumn are their favourite seasons. Direct Sun in burning places like Florida could be too much for them. Light-colored mulch, like seed shells, reflects the heat upward and helps to keep the ground cooler, good during the warm periods.
Some types like “Alderman” and “Wando” handle heat more well than others. When Peas suffer because of heat, regular and careful watering can prevent the drop in production. Yellow or brown leaves show that the plants really struggle.
Adding shade during the warmest afternoon helps the crop survive until the temperatures drop. Placing plants where they receive more shade when summer arrives canextend the growing season into autumn.
Sugar snap types of Peas are different, because they adapt well to partial shade. Even five hours of sunshine give good results, partly because Peas like to stay cool. Too many plants together crowd and compete for food and light, which reduces the total harvest.
Rotating the planting spot each year helps to escape soil diseases and problems. Full Sun also reduces fungus like powdery mildew.
Plants sprouting poorly under indoor light? Good lighting does wonders. On cool, sunny days move them outside for a natural Sun bath.
A small fan can stop leggy sprouts, but real light always wins. Nothing matches eating fresh Peas right from your own garden.