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Harvesting Carrots From Your Own Backyard

Updated on January 18, 2023
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Cygnet Brown is a high school and middle school substitute teacher. She is the author of fourteen books and a long-time gardener.

Grow Your Own Carrots and Get More Variety than You Can get from a Grocery Store

A wide variety of carrots can be grown in the home vegetable garden. They can be short, thin, long, stout, or any combination. Traditionally we think of carrots as being the traditional orange, but they also come in a warm range of colors, purple, yellow, white, and red.

These roots can be eaten fresh and in the right conditions can be stored for several months without refrigeration.

One serving of fresh carrots can provide more than the USDA-recommended daily allowance for vitamin A, and also provides a significant amount of Vitamins B, C, D, E, and K.

At a Glance: How to grow carrots

Plant Carrots in the early spring as soon as the ground can be worked. Plant successively every two weeks to extend the harvest.

Planting Depth: cover with 1/4 to 1/2 inch of loose soil.

Germination Time: 7-10 days

Growing time required: 70-80 days

Planting Carrots

One important thing to remember about growing carrots is that growing them in soil with too much nitrogen and long periods of hot weather cause carrots to become tough and bitter. In addition, sufficient lime, humus, and potassium (think wood ashes) are important for growing sweet carrots. Therefore, add lots of compost to your soil went preparing for planting carrots, but do not add manure of any kind.

For best results, I grow my carrots in a deeply prepared 4x8 foot bed of light sandy soil I have added as much compost as I can spare from other growing projects. I like to companion plant my carrots with leaf lettuce, green onions, and tomatoes. I plant the carrots in rows that are three inches apart. I dig shallow rows, drop the carrot seeds about 3 inches apart and then lightly cover them with a sprinkling of potting soil. I then water the carrots thoroughly and I then cover the rows that I just planted with small boards. I do this to help conserve water and to prevent weeds from growing until the carrots have started growing. I wait about 3-4 days and then every day I look under the boards to see if the carrots have started to sprout yet. As soon as I begin to see the carrots beginning to germinate, I remove the boards. About a week after the carrots germinate I weed by hand any weeds that have also germinated. After the carrots are about 3-4 inches tall, I lightly mulch around them to help conserve moisture. Thin carrots to three inches apart and use any baby carrots that you thin from the garden. Crowded carrots are stunted deformed carrots.

Plant carrots periodically (in succession) during the growing season rather than all at one time, I grow enough carrots to last throughout the year.

Purple carrots
Purple carrots | Source

Carrot Pest Control

Animal pests like deer, woodchucks, rabbits, and gophers are your biggest problem when it comes to carrot cultivation. The best way to keep them out is with a garden fence. Use a solid fence if possible. A deer won't jump a fence it can't see through. We built a fence using wood slabs from a local sawmill that worked beautifully to keep the deer out. Our dogs kept the other smaller animals away.

Carrots are susceptible to the carrot fly. The maggots of this insect attack the roots. To repel this fly, plant carrots near onions, leeks, salsify, and herbs such as rosemary, wormwood, and sage. Carrots will also grow well when planted with leaf lettuce and tomatoes. Carrots also grow well with peas. Carrots can also be covered with floating row covers to keep flies away during the egg-laying season.

Nematodes make knots along the roots causing the roots to become deformed. To prevent this, rotate the crops and apply plenty of compost (not manure). For severe nematode problems plant French marigolds in the bed the year before planting carrots.

Hot humid weather causes vegetable rot, a bacterial disease. To prevent this, again, be certain to change the location of your carrots in the garden every year.


Harvesting Carrots

Harvest carrots after they have been growing for the recommended time or however you prefer. You can start harvesting the carrots as soon as they are big enough to eat, or you can leave them in the garden and harvest them all at once. Dig your carrots before the first frost for winter use. Dampen the soil with water before digging to soften the soil and make digging easier.

To save carrots for winter use, cut off tops. Layer undamaged carrots (don't let them touch one another) in boxes filled with sand or peat moss and keep them in a cool, but never freezing location. If you want to save carrots for the early spring after the ground has thawed, you can leave the carrots in the ground and cover them with a deep layer of mulch. Dig in the spring before carrots begin to grow. Use as soon as possible or can or freeze.

How to Grow Carrots from Seed to Harvest

This content is accurate and true to the best of the author’s knowledge and is not meant to substitute for formal and individualized advice from a qualified professional.

© 2014 Cygnet Brown

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