VeggieHarvest.com

A guide to growing and  harvesting vegetables in your backyard

Asparagus

Beans

Beets 

Broccoli

Brussels Sprouts

Cabbage

Carrots

Cauliflower

Celery

Corn

Cucumber

Eggplant

Kale

Lettuce

Melons

Onions

Peas

Peppers

Potatoes

Spinach

Squash

Sweet Potatoes

Tomatoes

 


How to Grow Carrots

Temperature
   Germination 45-85 F
   For growth60-65 F
Soil and Water
Fertilizer - light feeder; too much top growth may indicate too much N
Side-dressing - Apply 3 weeks after germination, and again when 6-8" high
pH5.5-6.5
wateraverage
Measurements
Planting depth 1/4 - 1/2"
Root depth 2-4'
Height12"
Width 12-24"
Space between plants
In beds 2-3"
In rows 6"
Space between rows16-30"
Average plants per person 10-40
Harvest
Gently pull the roots out by their green tops.  For most varieties, don't let carrots grow fatter than 1 1/2" across, or they'll become woody.  
First Seed starting Date: 14-28 days before last frost date
Last Seed Starting Date: 85-98 Days before first frost date
Companions 
Companions:  All beans, leek, pepper, tomato
Incompatibles: Celery, dill (retards growth)

Storage Requirements
Remove the green tops, but do not wash the carrot before storing.  Store in sawdust or sand in containers.
Fresh
TemperatureHumidityStorage Life
32F90-95%4-5 months
3595-100%7-9 months
Preserved
MethodTasteShelf Life
Cannedfair12+ months
Frozengood8 months
Driedfair12+ months


Carrots are an annual cool-season crop, half-hardy to frost and light freezes.

Where to grow
Practically anywhere
 
Recommended varieties
In general carrot varieties are categorized by length:  short, medium, and long.  Variety selection should be determined by the kind of soil in which they will be grown:  tight clay soils for the shorter carrots, rich, loamy, well-drained soils for the longest kinds.  In order of root length:  Exheart (4 1/2"); Royal Chantenay; Danvers Half Long or Danvers 126; Goldinhart (5 1/2-7"); Scarlet Nantes; Poineer (7 inches); Gold Pak; Tendersweet; Imperator (8-9").

The sweetest and best textured carrots are the Nantes types, cylindrical and blunt tipped.  The long and tapered characteristics of Imperator varieties.  Nantes types absorb more water and therefore have less dry matter, making them more succulent and crisp.  They are also lower than other types in terpenoids, which cause a soapy turpentine-like taste; the amount of terpenoids depends entirely on the variety, not the soil.  Terpenoids break down in cooking so that carrots taste sweeter when cooked.  Nantes now describes any carrot with the above traits, not true lineage to the French region where the type originated. 
 
Soil
pH 6-6.5 is best.  Proper soil is the key to success with carrots.  Ideally it should be very fertile, deep, and easily worked with ample quantities of humus to permit the roots to grow quickly and straight.  The more natural fertility in the soil, the sweeter the carrot.  Heavy clay soils do not support good carrot growth.  Try carrots that don't require deep soil if your soil is not ideal. 
 
Planting
Germination in 10 -21 days. 
 
When - Carrots are hardy, and can be planted as soon as the ground can be worked.  For a continual crop, sections of the row can be planted every 2 weeks to late May.  For a fall crop, more sowings can be started in late July.
 
How - Since carrot seed germinates slowly, it can be mixed with radish or leaf lettuce, which germinate quickly and mark the row.  (The pulling of radish and leaf lettuce plants will also provide some natural thinning.)  Carrots do not transplant well, so start them outdoors once the soil is at least 45 degrees F.  Or the seed can be mixed with sand or dry compost to make sowing easier.  Sow seeds evenly in a very shallow furrow, about 1/4 inch deep, and keep seeds moist so they will germinate.  Space rows about 12" apart and when the first leaves emerge, thin to 1" apart; when true leaves emerge, thin to 3" apart.  If you delay final thinning a bit, you can use the removed roots as baby carrots.  
 
Culture
Carrots grow quickly at first, sending down a tiny orange root that expands and develops more quickly toward the end of its growing period.  As with all root crops, rapid, steady development produces the best results.  Keep the row weed free with light shallow cultivation or heavy mulching.  The seedlings must have steady moisture to develop well, with less moisture as the roots mature.  Too much moisture at the end of maturing will cause the roots to crack. To prevent greening the shoulders, hill up dirt around the greens. 
 
Harvest
Mature carrots will be ready in about 2 months, although some gardeners find them more succulent when they are pulled earlier than this.  A tiny head or crown of orange will appear at the soil line when the carrots are maturing.  Pull only those carrots needed since they remain fresh in the ground for some time.  The late summer crop can be harvested in winter if mulched.  The darkest and greenest tops indicate the largest carrots. 
 
Pests
None of major concern.
 
Diseases
None of major concern.