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Barley Sprouts

Hordeum vulgare
Also known as: Pearl Barley, Common Barley

Barley Sprouts is a sprout in the Poaceae family. It grows well indoors with medium moisture, and is listed for USDA zones 2-13. Plants reach maturity about 5–14 days after planting and sit about 3 inches apart.

Varieties

1 from Seeds Now · sorted by days to maturity
  • Barley Grass5–14 days

    Can tolerate hot temperatures; Direct sow; Grows well in full sun; Grows well with containers; Grows well with raised beds; Matures in <90 days; Start indoors; Super easy to grow

    Organic. Known as the the famous nutritious Super Green supplement. - It is even more nutritious in the form of raw juice. - Ideal for juicing. - Can be ground up for Barley flour and bread. - Extremely healthy and nutritious. Days to Harvest | Barley grass will be ready to harvest in appx. 6 to 10 days

    View on Seeds Now
Family
Poaceae
Category
Sprout
Form
Microgreen
Lifecycle
annual
Zone
2-13
Height
0.16666666666666666–0.3333333333333333 ft
Spread
0.08333333333333333–0.16666666666666666 ft
Sun
Indoors

Plant spacing

16 plants per square footSquare-foot planting diagram: a 1-foot square divided into a 4-by-4 grid holding 16 barley sprouts plants spaced 3 inches apart.
16 plants per square foot

In a square-foot bed, space barley sprouts about 3 in apart — that fits 16 plants in each 1-foot square (4×4). Wider rows or containers space the same.

Water
Medium

Plan your barley sprouts planting

Add barley sprouts to a free GardenDraft plan and get sow, transplant, and harvest dates computed for your ZIP code — with a drag-and-drop bed layout and reminders when it’s time to plant.

Start your free plan →

At a glance

Days to harvest
5–14 days
From transplant or sow to first harvest
Harvest style
Harvest once
One main harvest
Succession
Good for succession sowing

Storing & preserving

Use fresh — refrigerate briefly; not suited to preserving.

General home-preservation guidance — for tested processing times and safety, follow the National Center for Home Food Preservation.

Growing timeline

Propagation
Seed

Care & troubleshooting— extension-sourced, with citations

Something looks wrong?

Describe what you see on your barley sproutsand we'll rank the likely causes — most likely first, least-invasive fix first.

Corn earworm

Pestmoderate

Symptoms: caterpillars feeding at ear tips; chewed kernels and frass inside husk; damaged silks; worse in later-season plantings

Japanese beetles

Pestmoderate

Symptoms: leaves skeletonized between veins; lacy chewed foliage; metallic green-bronze beetles clustered on plants; feeding worst in warm midsummer sun

Phosphorus deficiency

Deficiencymoderate

Unusual this time of year.

Symptoms: stunted plants with dark dull green leaves; reddish or purplish tint on leaves and undersides; delayed maturity and poor fruiting; symptoms worst in cold spring soils; older leaves affected first

  • CulturalCheck soil test and soil temperaturestrong evidence — extension confidence

    Purpling in cold spring soils is often temporary, since cold roots can't take up phosphorus that's actually present; warm weather usually resolves it, so confirm a true shortage with a soil test before adding phosphorus.

    Source: UMN Extension; Missouri Botanical Garden

  • OrganicAdd phosphorus only if the test calls for itmoderate evidence — extension confidence

    If low phosphorus is confirmed, work a phosphorus source into the root zone per the test recommendation, and keep soil pH in range since extreme pH ties up phosphorus.

    Always follow the product label — it is the law.

    Source: UMN Extension

Wireworms

Pestmoderate

Unusual this time of year.

Symptoms: patchy poor germination; seedlings die in stretches; tunneled holes in potatoes and root crops; hard shiny orange-brown worms in soil; thinning stands after sod or grass

  • CulturalRotate away from grassy groundstrong evidence — extension confidence

    Avoid planting susceptible crops right after sod, pasture, or grass cover, where wireworms build up; rotate to a less-favored crop and let infested beds dry out between plantings.

    Source: UMass Extension: Wireworms; UC IPM: Wireworms

  • CulturalBait-trap to monitor· every 5 days · ~3 wksmoderate evidence — extension confidence

    Bury pieces of carrot or potato or a handful of soaked wheat seed as bait when soil reaches about 50F, check after several days, and remove the worms you find to gauge and reduce pressure.

    Source: UMass Extension: Wireworms

Aphids

Pestlow

Symptoms: clusters of tiny soft-bodied insects on new growth and undersides; sticky honeydew or sooty mold; curled distorted new leaves; ants tending them

  • CulturalBlast off with water· every 3 days · ~2 wksstrong evidence — extension confidence

    Knock colonies off with a strong jet of water in the morning; repeat every few days. Light infestations rarely need more.

    Source: UC IPM: Aphids

  • OrganicInsecticidal soap - label use only· every 1 wk · ~3 wksmoderate evidence — extension confidence

    For persistent colonies apply insecticidal soap to undersides per label. Avoid open flowers.

    Always follow the product label — it is the law.

    Source: UC IPM

Common corn smut

Diseaselow

Symptoms: swollen silvery-white galls on ears, tassels, or stalks; galls darken to a black sooty spore mass; worse after wounding, hail, or heavy nitrogen