posted 1 month ago
Hello carrot lovers. I came across your question, being new here, and finding so many things to read! (endless amounts - HA!) Finally taking the time to respond to something for once! I appreciate this site! I only recently came across it.. wondering where this had been all my days! HA!
I have always germinated carrots under row covers for the best success. I water right on top of the row cover, and don’t lift it up, until I see green through the wet cover. One thing that I know, is that you can plant them too deeply - lettuce too, amongst other things. I basically plant them right on the surface and give them barely a brush over of soil. Carrot seed is terrible at keeping from year to year in my experience. It also doesn’t take transplanting well, unless you use soil blocks.. but even then, won’t do the best unless planted direct - again, only in my experience.
A rule of thumb for seeding that my Grandpa taught me, was to ONLY plant a seed as deep as 3X the seed’s thickness. That works very well for me. I spent years as a market gardener - of baby crops of everything… now specialize in fung’tional fungi!
Back to carrot thoughts… carrots like raw soil, loose and deep. They don’t do well with amendments but love nutritious soil, and love water, but not sopping wet. They don’t prefer gravely soil .. they will grow many legs in it… also dislike following grass on new patches of land, also don’t rotate them after a lettuce patch as they share the same pest. Rotating them in after an alluim crop will get rid of a few peskies too! Best of luck…
It is a beautiful life. Live from heart space, get your toes into the dirt as much as possible, and care for yourself and your community as a grandparent would. To all my relations - M’sit No'kmaq