Beautiful, nutritious beet greens, all sprouted from one little beet seed (which is actually a dried fruit containing a cluster of 2 to 6 seeds).
Realization of the Day:
I currently have 13 unopened packets of heirloom beet seeds in my posession—the newest from 2009. I may need a repeat of that 2007
massive seed packet purge.
Organized gardeners probably sort through their old seeds before placing their new seed orders. I finally placed my first seed order for 2012 last Thursday, and then decided to dig out all of my various (actually somewhat organized!) containers of seeds.
Thankfully I hadn't ordered any beet seeds.
More below. . .
—Detroit Dark Red (5!)
—Bull's Blood (3)
—Egyptian
—Flat of Egypt
—Golden
—Lutz Winter Keeper
—Crapaudine
I don't think I've ever grown most of these—or at least never harvested them. I do love Detroit and Bull's Blood, which produces the most beautiful greens. I have no recollection of ordering the Crapaudine from Baker Creek in 2009, but it sounds intriguing:
In 1885, the French book The Vegetable Garden stated this is one of the oldest varieties. Today some experts feel this may be the oldest beet still in existence, possibly dating back 1,000 years. This unique variety is one of the most flavorful, with carrot-shaped roots that have rough, dark colored skin which looks like tree bark. Inside, the roots are very dark, with almost black flesh that is of superior quality and sought after by chefs who want real flavor. (250 seeds, $2.50)
I hope they're still good. I'm tempted to just mix all the seeds together like I sometimes do with lettuce seeds so that I won't end up with any big empty rows, but it might be better to know which variety is which.
With eight of my 4'x8' raised beds all prepped and ready for spring planting
(only 17 more to go!), I've been itching to get a jump on direct seeding
something before we launch into lambing season next week before we get any further into lambing season and I completely forget about the garden. (I wrote most of this post yesterday morning and by last night
lambing season had begun!) If all goes well, we should have about 40 baby lambs bouncing around the farm by the first of April, and they pretty much consume my life—in a cute overload kind of way.
But despite a freaky heat wave this past week, the calendar says it's still a little early to direct seed beets. You can start beet seeds indoors (five weeks before the last frost), but I'll just wait and direct seed when it's closer to the recommended planting time, three to four weeks before the last frost, which is officially April 15th for us, though we often have later frosts and/or earlier hot weather. Spring in Missouri is usually pretty strange, weather wise.
With this weird winter we've been having—several inches of
snow last week, 70°F yesterday, blustery winds and a high of only 46° yesterday, 20° this morning—I'm tempted to just go ahead and sow the beet seeds in the garden now and see what happens. With 13 packets, I definitely have enough seeds to do several successive plantings. That would be an interesting experiment, assuming I bothered to take any notes. (Oh wait. There's my moon planting paranoia; see below.)
Whether you start your beet seeds outdoors or in, you'll want to soak them in water for 24 hours first to aid germination. Avoid planting beets where you've just grown spinach or
Swiss chard.
Beets prefer deep, well-drained soil that includes plenty of organic material such as compost or aged manure. Keep your beets cool by growing them beneath mulches; grass clippings work great.
Good companions for beets: bush beans, the cabbage family, corn, leeks, lettuce, lima beans, onions, and radishes. Bad companions: mustard and pole beans.
Thinning beets (late, which is why they're so big) with Baby Cary back in 2006
For more beet planting tips, check out my previous post,
How To Grow Beets from Seed and Why You Should (which I've updated with some of the information in this post.) And don't forget that the beet greens are edible, too! Seedlings need to be thinned (more thinning info in the post mentioned above), and the tender young leaves are wonderful in salads.
I always learn something new when I pick up my well loved copy of
The Vegetable Gardener's Bible, which has been my favorite gardening book for the last 12 years. This time it was a sidebar in the beet section called An Exception to Every Rule:
Although in general beets grow best in cool weather, an extended cold snap (two or more weeks below 50°F/10°C) that occurs after beet plants have formed a tidy rosette of leaves can force them to bolt, which ruins the quality of the roots. If a long cool period is expected, place a floating row cover over plants to keep daytime temperatures above 50°F (10°C).
What I really need to be doing right now is starting tomato, pepper, and basil seeds indoors in flats. These cold intolerant plants need to grow under lights in the warmth of the house until night air temperatures stay above 45°—and after lambing season.
If you're minding the moonsigns, fertile days in the first and second quarter are the best time to plant most seeds. Remaining in this first quarter: Monday, Tuesday, and Wednesday (February 27th-29th). Then March 26th and 27th. Second quarter: Saturday March 3rd and March 31st are it.
The first quarter is best for starting lettuce, broccoli, greens, beans, etc., plus onions. The second quarter is best for peppers, tomatoes, eggplant, squash. I avoid planting anything on Sundays because I once read it was something like a black hole of death, only good for doing things like weeding, and have been understandably paranoid ever since. The same goes for the entire fourth quarter, though many people treat it just like the third quarter. Maybe I shouldn't have told you this.
Because beets form underground, they should be planted on fertile days in the third quarter (another 'sign' I shouldn't be planting any beets yet!), along with garlic and potatoes and other root plants such as carrots, turnips, and parsnips (but not onions), plus bulbs and perennials. Seedlings of all kinds should also be transplanted in the third quarter.
Best beet planting days are under the signs of Cancer (breast), Scorpio (groin), Pisces (feet), Libra (loins), and Capricorn (knee): March 10th, 12th, 13th, April 7th, 9th, and 12th. So it looks like mid March for me and my beet seeds.
Are you a beet grower? Any tips, tricks, favorite varieties, or recipes to share?
Have more garden space? Easy to grow from seed heirloom favorites:
Last year I grew Crapaudine, Chioggia, golden, and bulls blood. My Crapaudine didn't do very well, but the others were great. Bulls blood were delicious, Chioggia and golden were good too! I will plant all 4 again this year. Maybe I'll have better luck.
ReplyDeleteIt seems to me that since your seed is old anyway, and you didn't buy it this year, what could it hurt to plant some of the beets and see what happens?
ReplyDeleteIt has been an unusually mild winter and you might get lucky. But if not, there is nothing lost, because the seed was old anyway.
I have a confession...I've never tasted beet greens. But I plan to fix that this year because I'm growing some. Yours look beautiful!
ReplyDeleteI have tried beets for 3 or 4 years in a row and I have NEVER had one get as much as 1/2 inch in size, if that.
ReplyDeleteI have no idea what I've been doing wrong, and everyone tells me how easy they are to grow.
Great to see all your beets. I'm not sure if they would grow in our tropical climate with lots of rain? Like you, gardeners here plant by the phases of the moon. The older ones simply use the following: things that grow up should be planted 3 days before Full Moon and things that grow down, 3 days after full moon. Some also use MacDonald's Almanac, which does of course give the full range of astrological gardening dates. Happy planting!
ReplyDeleteWe just ate some pickled beets that have been hanging out in the refrigerator since, oh, June or so. I use a recipe I got from my mother-in-law's sister's husband (got that?) for HIS Aunt Belvie's pickled beets. They're just as southern as they sound, and really delicious. They were the treat I offered my son to lure him out of grandma's lap so she could eat her dinner in peace.
ReplyDeleteGotta love a kid who thinks pickled beets are a treat.
The closest I've gotten to planting by the moon is putting my fava beans in for a fall/winter cover crop during the first full moon of October.
ReplyDeleteBeyond that, I'm a moon planting failure.
Maybe one day...
I have yet to try growing Beets, the hubs will not eat them but I think thats because they take on that "Earthy" flavor only after they are cooked, they are beautiful chaved into think slices and in salads and that is just what I will have to do this year, grow beets and make him a changed man - ha!
ReplyDeleteI didn't used to like beets until we started growing them ourselves last year and HAD to eat them and their greens, and now I actually love them! The soil quality is not great in the fairly new community garden where we do most of our veggie gardening, so our beets were small, too. But this spring, I'm going to use almost all of our compost to beef up the small garden in our small yard and try the beets there instead. A recipe I tried last summer and liked a lot was Little French Beets from the New Basics Cookbook. You can find it online. Beets, onions, bacon, balsamic vinegar... Can't go wrong! And now, I must check out your "How to Grow Beets from Seed" post to learn everything I don't know!
ReplyDeleteI cant begin to give you enough praise for your fabulous blog! I have never been much of a "disciplined" gardener, but since my husband and I bought some mountain acreage- all I have dreamed about is creating some sort of homestead.
ReplyDeleteI'm determined to be a whole lot more self sufficient, and reading your musings always give me plenty of ideas, and make me optimistic that even in this day and age, a family farm can exist, no matter what the size!
I only wish my beets were doing as well as yours ;)