How to Grow Beets All Year

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  • Опубликовано: 21 авг 2024
  • Growing beets can be a bit of a challenge and in todays video I try and give a rundown of how we grow thousands of bunches of beets per year on a market garden scale.
    This video covers: how to grow beets, how to grow beets for storage, how to grow beets in the summer, how to grow better beet greens, should you spray beets with salt water, marketing beets, and more.
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Комментарии • 620

  • @notillgrowers
    @notillgrowers  2 года назад +195

    I usually try to mention that I'm in KY, zone 6b but I forgot. So, uh, yeah, KY zone 6b!

    • @chuckwagon7171
      @chuckwagon7171 2 года назад +7

      KY here as well, I grow some in raised beds because no matter how I try to keep the deer out in the field they always find a way to mow em down

    • @natureboy6410
      @natureboy6410 2 года назад +5

      How does periodically harvesting the greens affect the size and growth of the beetroot?

    • @chuckwagon7171
      @chuckwagon7171 2 года назад +3

      @@natureboy6410 photosynthesis, when they can't eat the sun...they grow less

    • @natureboy6410
      @natureboy6410 2 года назад +5

      @@chuckwagon7171 I was thinking harvesting it like you would chard or mustard, only harvesting the outside leaves inward, leaving the bulk of the young leaves in the center alone.

    • @chuckwagon7171
      @chuckwagon7171 2 года назад +6

      @@natureboy6410 you'll end up getting harvest beets, it will just be slower

  • @kimberlybontrager3436
    @kimberlybontrager3436 2 года назад +300

    I like to add a little cheap cinnamon to my seed trays I have even gotten away with recycling soil and have no damp off problems whatso ever because the cinnamon kills all fungus. It also is a great rooting compound

    • @collinrothwell8532
      @collinrothwell8532 Год назад +11

      Thank you . Will try it out as we have a we climate

    • @ladyryan902
      @ladyryan902 Год назад +12

      @kimberly THANKS. I forgot about cinnamon..i had beautiful cucumbers and pumpkin growing until yesterday they were protected from the freeze then started curling 😕 I recycle my pot soil also

    • @plantedbythebeach8010
      @plantedbythebeach8010 Год назад +21

      Keeps the fungas gnats away too

    • @buckstarchaser2376
      @buckstarchaser2376 Год назад +6

      I'll have to try that. Thanks!

    • @joannasheldon2146
      @joannasheldon2146 Год назад +20

      Well, the trouble with using an anti-fungal compound is that you'll prevent the plant from forming a relationship with the beneficial fungi in the soil, which is vital for its health and ability to find water and nutrients in the soil. I prefer using a lot of sand in my potting mix: 6 parts sand, 6 parts dampened coir, 3 parts worm casts. When I have it I add a light sprinkling of biochar and sometimes a sprinkling of seaweed. The seaweed would be particularly good in the case of beets.

  • @hennieloubser3692
    @hennieloubser3692 Год назад +28

    I am a veges farmer in Botswana Africa and are sowing beets direct throughout the year. Detroit Dark Red or Crimson Clobe gives good results. Close them up with 30% shade net sheets which I pull over a bended 20mm black plastic pipe to form a bow. Pin them down with a "U" bended piece of wire at each bow about 5m spaced. Sow 7 rows of beet seeds on a 1 meter raised bed.
    Germination takes about 2 weeks but needs lots of watering at the start, 25mm the first day and 2nd day again. We have very hot summer days of 40 degree celcius but with enough water they manage. Winter germination 2 weeks, but then I cut the shade nets out, and just watering.
    Beets handle our cold nights very well, which can go minus 1 to 2 degrees celcius.
    I have build a rolling hole press to "hole" the beds, pull it with a tractor which runs across the beds. before I put 2 seeds per hole by hand. A bit labour intensive to plant, and then I thin out 3 weeks after sowing, to be left with a seedling per hole.
    I do this on commercial scale and harvest 10kg per running meter which gives me 60 - 65 beets.
    People more intersted in more info send me a note I willing to share my results as long as you are making a harvest!

    • @taunta37
      @taunta37 Год назад

      You no doubt have the best soil ❤

    • @christopherburman3340
      @christopherburman3340 Год назад +2

      Interesting. Am in limpopo, south africa. Hobby farmer with 3 hectares. I will try your approach. We grow far too much for our own consumption. My wife wants to start selling, so we're trying to work out where to start. We do everything in a regenerative way. Our biggest challenge is snails, so we also use shade net on hoops to try and keep them out!

    • @oyandakona5994
      @oyandakona5994 10 месяцев назад

      🇿🇦🇿🇦👩‍🌾

  • @codedesigns9284
    @codedesigns9284 2 года назад +185

    Not sure if it’s the best idea, but while we grow a lot of beats, we take a couple leaves from each as the season goes for beat-top salads. It’s a great replacement for lettuce which does not grow well in warm weather. Hope this helps someone! 😀

    • @johnhubbard6262
      @johnhubbard6262 2 года назад +34

      Beet greens are superior to other greens for nutrients

    • @jeffreylyons1531
      @jeffreylyons1531 2 года назад +13

      Definitely the best idea! I love love love braised beet tops, I don’t really care for the beet itself lol

    • @arshadhussain5145
      @arshadhussain5145 2 года назад +4

      Thank

    • @arshadhussain5145
      @arshadhussain5145 2 года назад +5

      When can you harvest the leaves from?

    • @codedesigns9284
      @codedesigns9284 2 года назад +16

      @@arshadhussain5145 We typically wait until the beets are big enough to support taking leaves from, so the leaves will regrow. Taking leaves when the beet is too small is not good for the root. So the leaves will be about the size of a Romaine Leaf size(ish) when it’s ok to take a leaf here-and-there. Some will be smaller, some will be bigger.

  • @julietardos5044
    @julietardos5044 2 года назад +22

    Fun fact about beets: their color does not stain fabric. This is because its color molecules are too large to stick to fabric. Chemists and dyers have been trying for centuries because their color is so beautiful, but at this point, I don't think it's going to happen.
    Best beet recipe: Peel, dice, simmer in orange juice with a dash of nutmeg until soft. Eat. Yum.

  • @TheNewMediaoftheDawn
    @TheNewMediaoftheDawn 2 года назад +71

    I love beets as well, pretty underrated by most except for old people, Eastern Europeans, foodies, health freaks, and market gardeners…🤣 My favourites are golden as a home grower, but I find them more finicky too, worse germination rates, slower growing, but so purdy and tasty. Starting 2020, I did a cut and come again on the greens and the new green growth replaces the old harvested in under 2 weeks. I get at least 5-7 leaf harvests before I harvest the whole beet with still full leaves and root, that looks like a normal fully intact beet plant.

    • @notillgrowers
      @notillgrowers  2 года назад +4

      Intersting!

    • @advancednutritioninc908
      @advancednutritioninc908 2 года назад +3

      I love beets and the greens! 45 miles north of Atlanta GA - do you selectively cut or just slice all the greens off in one shot?

    • @TheNewMediaoftheDawn
      @TheNewMediaoftheDawn 2 года назад +6

      @@advancednutritioninc908 I’m glad you asked as I was concerned I didn’t clarify…. Myself I selectively harvest the biggest “swiss chard” outer leaves, and let the small inner ones re-grow quickly, exactly like one would harvest their close relative Chard…. But I’ve heard of market gardeners doing a full cut of everything for salad mix, many many times, although I’m guessing the re-grow is a bit longer, although with good fertility should be fine…

    • @advancednutritioninc908
      @advancednutritioninc908 2 года назад +1

      @@TheNewMediaoftheDawn Thank you for the details!! Have an Awesome Week!!

    • @juneshannon8074
      @juneshannon8074 2 года назад +3

      I’m one of the old people. However I’ve recently been introduced to roasting beets, yum. I also pickle them in traditional way,and make beet relish which is great in a meat sandwich. My beet preference is the old fashioned red globe type.

  • @Horse237
    @Horse237 2 года назад +12

    I freeze beets so freezing breaks cell walls making nutrients available. Then I thaw them out and dice them for a salad. I use olive oil and Apple Cider Vinegar for my dressing.

  • @TheRealLukeOlson
    @TheRealLukeOlson 2 года назад +161

    I love the editing, side-bar commentary, and dad humor. Big fan of the whole vibe of the channel. 👍🏼👍🏼👍🏼 Some very excellent content.

  • @workinprogress3609
    @workinprogress3609 2 года назад +27

    Thanks! This video beets all others I have seen, so far.

  • @MamaKat3037
    @MamaKat3037 Год назад +29

    You mentioned people tend to buy the red round beets over the other varieties. Have you ever considered selling a "sampler" bunch to introduce them to the different kinds of beets?

  • @Cherryparfait41
    @Cherryparfait41 2 года назад +87

    Love this upbeet video!
    Always trying to up my game on beets and looking for the secret that will work for me.

  • @agb6330
    @agb6330 2 года назад +74

    Growing beets for the first time and thoroughly enjoying them in our urban raised bed garden. For dinner last night we had beet greens sautéed with bacon and riced cauliflower. Then placed seasoned tilapia fillets on top, baked in the oven. Ummm Ummm good! I also made beet stalk refrigerator pickles! I love beets ♥️. Update on the beet stalk pickles….. too stringy.

    • @makeoversbymeme2077
      @makeoversbymeme2077 Год назад +6

      Sooo, what time is dinner ? 😊

    • @markseymour940
      @markseymour940 Год назад +3

      Replace tilapia with wild caught salmon. Much healthier

    • @faithmercy7647
      @faithmercy7647 Год назад +3

      Careful. Cooked beets are high in sugar, but Raw strengthens blood.

    • @williemasterofdestruction5339
      @williemasterofdestruction5339 Год назад +2

      Mmmm.... now I'm hungry!
      Maybe I can sneak the beets in and the people here that claim not to like them won't notice...😂

    • @Acts-1322
      @Acts-1322 Год назад +4

      Sounds incredible, wish more of my patients would go to this medicine during their meals instead of the crazy expensive petroleum based pills created by Rockefeller's modern medicine

  • @christinelewis5765
    @christinelewis5765 Год назад +3

    ‘Dry climate crop’ 😮 sorry I just have to chuckle at how things can vary. I’m in Juneau, Alaska and we are in the Tongas National Rain Forest. Our summers are very wet, but beets are one of our best crops. The temps are moderate and cool and seem to like the moisture. We usually grow the Detroits and have excellent, and delicious beets that will store in the fridge for several months. I enjoyed your video. Thanks for sharing!

  • @lauragillespie189
    @lauragillespie189 Год назад +3

    Thanks, Jessie! I personally love your puns. Growing beets first time, middle GA.

  • @paulsoutbackgardenaustrali7674
    @paulsoutbackgardenaustrali7674 2 года назад +6

    Yep..been growing Detroit beets for over 20yrs...and they are the best...and you can easily grow year round as long as last seeds are planted 4_6 weeks before frost...🤔☺🇭🇲

  • @homelife8597
    @homelife8597 2 года назад +11

    “One day I’ll find that vegetable that likes poor draining soil, because I’ve got some work for it” 😂😂 give Malabar spinach a try. It needs consistent moisture and doesn’t mind wet feet. Really popular in Asia and India, so depending on the diversity in your are, it may take some time to gain traction.

  • @coopsblooms5824
    @coopsblooms5824 2 года назад +20

    NC zone 7b, red clay but we practice no till,
    Broadfork each bed and use a nice layer of compost and amendments. I’ve tried paper pot and direct seeding. Paper pot resulted in weird shapes and I personally don’t like the results in our context for any crop. I prefer jang with I believe LJ12 and sometimes have to adjust the brush because as you mentioned the seeds are all different. We seed on 30 inch beds, 3 rows.
    Boro, golden, and chioggia. Golden sell best at market and for me Chioggia tastes the best. I’ve found washing with modified electric pressure washer with the green spray nozzle gets them super clean and is really fast. I still haven’t found the right velocity for the peddle sprayer set up yet. But it works great for washing hands. Spend the time pulling the extra soil and bad leaves in the field. It’s makes cleaning so much easier.

    • @notillgrowers
      @notillgrowers  2 года назад +4

      Great additions, thanks!

    • @reimerron
      @reimerron Год назад

      What sprockets are you using for KJ12? Thanks.

  • @ironrose888
    @ironrose888 2 года назад +3

    New to gardening but we love beets. I have watched your video a couple of times.
    I eat the beet greens in salads. Then we juice the beets with apples and ginger. Taste like a liquid sweet tart. 😍
    If your body needs healing, the juice will knock you out. I have slept for 8-12 hours after the juice. 1 beet, 4-5 apples (we use Granny Smith) and fresh ginger, about the size of your thumb or larger per person. I like larger amount of ginger. Happy healing ❤️‍🩹

  • @allysonmurray1731
    @allysonmurray1731 8 месяцев назад +1

    I soak my beet seeds in a little fish emulsion water before planting. Have had great success with sprouting within a week.

  • @jumpyjenny2532
    @jumpyjenny2532 Год назад +10

    I like your comments about not wasting anything. I separate the beet, leaves and stems and use them in different ways but I like to cut the stems in small uniform pieces and pickle them. Even when I thin my beets I save them for micro greens on my salad.

  • @debbiespitznagel1472
    @debbiespitznagel1472 Год назад +2

    Charles Dowding multi sows beets in a clusters of 4 or 5. Then he plants them out in the cluster, and will harvest one beet at a time by twisting them out.

  • @homesteadgal4143
    @homesteadgal4143 2 года назад +23

    I grow in Zone 6b/7a, northern Shenandoah Valley, VA.
    I grow mostly the Goldens and do pretty well with them. This year we converted our large garden #1 to raised beds. Our fill was a mushroom compost mix. I direct seeded in a bed that was to be planted w/ tomatoes. Took WEEEEEKs for germination (much longer than normal, but our weather was not 'normal'). Without a doubt, growing beets in the raised bed makes for much easier seeding and harvesting, and the compost mix is great for beets (heck, for ALL of our garden so far). I've been harvesting the greens for about 3 weeks now; yesterday, pulled some beets for a meal...delicious! No insect damage to leaves at all, beautiful roots. Direct sowing was on April 14, so a little over 60 days to harvest beets.
    I will be direct sowing again today (Detroit Reds), and since this is a very cool June, I'm gambling that we'll get 'summer beets' this year.
    After listening to your raves about tunnel-growing, I'll try a small patch in my greenhouse for Fall.
    I also save seeds, so some of my earlier beets will be left in the ground to bolt.
    We eat raw and cooked beets (mostly in stir fries), raw and cooked leaves. Every part of the beet is delicious.
    New subscriber...I get a kick out of your calculations...math can be a gardener's friend. :-)

    • @daniellebailey6802
      @daniellebailey6802 Год назад

      Totally off topic, but we just spent the weekend in Luray. The whole area is beautiful!❤

  • @suffling505
    @suffling505 2 года назад +15

    We have had great success doing "multi-sown" transplants, inspired by Charles Dowding. We grow 3-5 beets per clump, they all size up, perhaps 15% smaller than single beets, but overall 3 times the yield per bed. From one 100 ft bed we harvested 50 big bunches last week, will harvest 40 bunches this week, and we'll prob have more leftover

    • @nathanwooldridge85
      @nathanwooldridge85 2 года назад +1

      Have you had much success in pulling the largest ones in any one clump and leaving the others to size up? I know this is what Charles suggests you can do, but whenever I try this, the remaining beets don't seem to increase in size

    • @suffling505
      @suffling505 2 года назад +1

      @@nathanwooldridge85 yep, we sometimes twist out the large ones and the remaining ones will size up. sometimes we supplement some fertility through a foliar

    • @notillgrowers
      @notillgrowers  2 года назад +1

      Good to know. I feel as though I do twist them, but I haven't seen Charles' videos on beets. I trust his expertise. I'll have to see if he does something different than I do. Or maybe it's a varietal thing. My experience is that the other beets simply sit there pretty much static, perhaps the foliar helps.

    • @sarahradke7078
      @sarahradke7078 2 года назад +7

      I’ve been experimenting with cutting the beetroot out of the clump, with a small knife to get as close in and far down as possible. It’s only my first season trying it, but so far I think it’s been better than twisting the whole root out in terms of letting the other beets in the clump size up. An unanticipated benefit is that the beets are easier to wash as there’s less ‘soil cling’. And, of course, it’s always beneficial for the soil microbes to leave roots in the ground.
      If anyone else is trying this approach, I’d love to hear how it’s working for you.

    • @hyacinthABC
      @hyacinthABC 2 года назад +2

      @@dispmonk I just marvel at his vids and figure he has the perfect climate with perfect soil tilth. My beets often push up out of the soil and get tanned shoulders if I don't dump more soil on top, he never seems to have any problems.

  • @purplethumb7887
    @purplethumb7887 9 месяцев назад +2

    I love your easy-going, friendly, "I'm not a perfect know-it-all" delivery. Lots of great information. Thank you!

  • @PK-zq2st
    @PK-zq2st Год назад +5

    Thank you! We grow a fair amount of beets in MN we plant them in a triangle point to point three inches seed at each point the triangles are 6 inches apart linear and 10” apart lateral. 3 row grouping. When the beets grow in the triangle they push outward. It works well. Great content thank you again.

  • @nickzivs
    @nickzivs 2 года назад +14

    Awesome video! Leaf miners are definitely an issue here in southern Ontario. I am just a small-time gardener doing it for sustenance so I take a few minutes a day to check leaves and rub off eggs with my finger.

  • @nedbluestone
    @nedbluestone 2 года назад +12

    Leaf miners are the major pest for me in Boise, ID. The best way to avoid damage is using floating row cover cloth. If the damage is minor it will not affect the beet root, but with a heavy infestation will eventually lessen the quality of your beet root. Also attacks chard and spinach leaves. Great vids. Thanks for sharing all this info.

    • @nosajsamaniego4512
      @nosajsamaniego4512 Год назад +1

      Look for a natural predator to leaf miners, and introduce them into your garden;

    • @michaelo6124
      @michaelo6124 Год назад

      @@nosajsamaniego4512 that's a stupid advice. Don't listen to it. Cover beets with row cover or netting and the problem is solved

  • @markpennella
    @markpennella Год назад +2

    You are one of our top 3 favorite growing channels! We would love to see you experiment with electro-culture! My students and I were very successful experimenting with growing living soil, and now I am introducing passive electro-culture to them in our sustainable living STEM style course. If you ever do a video on electro culture, give a shout out to Mr. Pennella's Sustainable Living STEM class at Piedmont Christian School in Virginia. You are a great inspiration!!

  • @TheTrock121
    @TheTrock121 2 года назад +4

    I started using Frost Resistant Row Covers last year and had some beets survive the Winter. I ate the rest, but for the first time have one that is going to produce seeds.

  • @rosea830
    @rosea830 2 года назад +19

    This is great info. I got a few chuckles and agree that Blood Turnip is a great name. I didn't think beets would do well in the heat, so I never tried to grow them past spring. Thank you! I use shredded paper as a mulch for carrots. It retains the moisture and keeps the weeds out, but it's light enough that the seedlings can bust through. I'm sure that would work for beets also (usually start them in trays to get a jump on spring). TN USDA zone 7a, but it'really a 6a.

    • @littlelomaricafarm7302
      @littlelomaricafarm7302 Год назад +7

      I grow beets year round in zone 9b they do fine in the heat. Our hottest week was 110-114 this summer and the beets just slowed down. I plant beet more beets every time I pull them to eat. So it is s succession. We love the greens as salad or even sautéed like spinach or kale.

  • @baretstrieter554
    @baretstrieter554 2 года назад +20

    So informative. Thanks for all the great detail. I love beet greens and prefer them to spinach as a cooked green. Also I have been growing bulls blood beets the past 2 seasons to add the leaves to salads, which makes a nice contrast with the distinctive purplish leaves. I think I will try to grow beets under my tomatoes this season per your suggestion. Thank you!

    • @alph8654
      @alph8654 2 года назад

      I like the beet greens real well also !!!

  • @la1163
    @la1163 2 года назад +2

    Roasted beet tacos with goat milk cheese are the best! I've grown most of them from bull's blood to gourmet blend and an albino beetroot. All delicious if I say so. I'm inTexas zone 9a or 9b one of those. Happy gardening farmer Jesse

  • @robertling9872
    @robertling9872 2 года назад +10

    Thank you for sharing your knowledge and growing info.

  • @peterv3216
    @peterv3216 2 года назад +15

    Love the content! I wish the number of small or even mini farms grew more, especially in eastern europe. People are so... big ag focused. phew!

  • @carlclark3167
    @carlclark3167 2 года назад +20

    Leaf miners ravaged my beets. Then I tried growing under netting and it was revelatory. Definitely a big issue for both beets and spinach in my old garden, no matter how often I checked leaves for eggs. Only growing under cover allowed me a harvest. I'm looking forward to getting to know my new garden.

    • @gunning6407
      @gunning6407 2 года назад +2

      Where are you located?

    • @robynwalters6083
      @robynwalters6083 Год назад +3

      I grow in the Inland Northwest as a home gardener. I think this may be the last year I ever grow beet if covering them doesn't work. Every year they get ravaged by leaf miners and die before they even kinda size up. Crushing eggs is BS imo; I could crush them in morning and have hundreds more laid by evening. Really hope covering them helps

    • @denisekelley2292
      @denisekelley2292 Год назад +2

      @@robynwalters6083 I'm in St Helens Oregon (Northwest Oregon) leaf miners destroy my beets every year too. I'm with you, netting when I sow and crossing my fingers.

    • @joniboulware1436
      @joniboulware1436 Год назад

      I tried Swiss Chard in Snoqualmie with same disgusting leaf miner problems. Am now in Texas and no leaf miners, but aphids just smother the Pak Choi and Tatsoi mustard. Am now keeping them around just to keep aphids off everything else as they are such magnets. I had aphids even before things were hardened off for planting so not sure a net would keep the aphids away.

    • @AJWGBFX
      @AJWGBFX Год назад +2

      I get leaf miners here in UK. At the first sign I remove affected leaves, then I spray with neem oil ( the one with chemical beginning with a in it!). I repeat spray a week later. I get good enough, but not perfect control doing this.

  • @codysaunders7348
    @codysaunders7348 Год назад +5

    When you water your trays, either by soaking or misting, add 10% peroxide by volume. The extra oxygen is beneficial for the roots, but will destroy any pathogenic fungi. It literally melts molds

    • @digsindirt4490
      @digsindirt4490 Год назад +1

      And kills fungus gnats. I “wash” all my pepper and tomato plants this way and the roots are amazing.

  • @jonneil7169
    @jonneil7169 Год назад +1

    Well, i just watched 4 of your videos and i'm beat...So much good info. I grow my beets for the deer, at least that's the way it's worked out..After 20 years w/o a fence, i think i want one now, the deer have plenty to eat around here.

  • @CarolNZ22
    @CarolNZ22 Год назад +3

    Thank you. 😊 I live in South Island N.Z. Heading into winter and i started my beet seedings late. You really helped me decide to keep these guys in my glasshouse. Might be a wet winter and dont want them to drown.

  • @victorandrews9790
    @victorandrews9790 Год назад +2

    Good video....I've always loved beets! My wife pickled some that were give to us last year. Now, I'm about set to plant my first ever beet crop on April 1, 2023. And, as a result of this video, I'm gonna direct seed about half and seed/Transplant the other half. Just a bit of a test for our hobby farm.

  • @kmathis2352
    @kmathis2352 Год назад +2

    Going to check this out later. I planted beets last summer. And most of them came out so tiny. In the past, beets were always the easiest thing to grow.

    • @jSheapullen
      @jSheapullen Год назад

      I had to wait until my leaves over 1 foot to get decent sized beets.

  • @irisdude
    @irisdude Год назад +2

    You just cant beat the information you provide in these videos! Thanks.

  • @davemikenstephenson
    @davemikenstephenson Год назад +1

    Love that you get to the relevant stuff while having fun and being witty

  • @kayreynolds3801
    @kayreynolds3801 Год назад +3

    Definitely agree that golden beets do not grow as strongly as red beets. Here in UK (zone 9) Boltardy is our go to red beet.

  • @odzk1757
    @odzk1757 2 года назад +7

    Farmer Matthew Mcconaughey

    • @notillgrowers
      @notillgrowers  2 года назад +1

      Oh that's a new one. I usually get Rick Grimes

  • @tanyaratti
    @tanyaratti Год назад +1

    I love beets… i grow them every year but tend to often not get a large beet - I probably sow too close and dont thin (hate the thought of the tossing of a good plant) This year though was very wet with overflowing rainwater tanks that flood the vegetable garden. I came upon them (transplanted as single seedlings) and they are HUGE cylindrical Ferona beets.

  • @Qopzeep
    @Qopzeep 2 года назад +14

    Nasturtiums grow well in moist soil, if you can count that as a crop. They taste great in salads (flowers and leaves) and you can pickle the flower buds like capers.

    • @jenna-here8737
      @jenna-here8737 Год назад +3

      Nasturtiums are one of my favs!! Their seeds are like peppercorns & can be put into a pepper grinder at end of their blooming season! (let them dry or oven dry 1st ) Awesome plant!!! :)

    • @Qopzeep
      @Qopzeep Год назад

      @@jenna-here8737 that's great tip! And let's not forget their beautiful flowers :) very bee- and farmer-friendly!

    • @MrRemakes
      @MrRemakes Год назад +1

      I've heard they're good for deterring cucumber beetles and squash bugs too, but I haven't tested that yet. Last year our zucchini got swamped with cucumber beetles, so I'm excited to try it.

    • @m.gilbert1176
      @m.gilbert1176 Год назад

      Taro too can grow in soggy soil.

  • @demenACE
    @demenACE Год назад

    My wife and I got a box full of beet greens. Clean, remove stems, cook and eat em! YUM! Start sauteeing the stems and as they get tender, add the leaves cut as you like, enjoy!

  • @lilycardoso4679
    @lilycardoso4679 Год назад +2

    Thank you, I was trying to figure out why only 50% of my seeds germinated. Will try covering them.

  • @clynthia0510
    @clynthia0510 Год назад +3

    You are thorough! That's not necessarily a bad thing. I prefer more rather than less information. I don't know if I want to grow beets now. But I do like you and your humor, a lot!!! Thanks 😃

  • @Dom10Sage5
    @Dom10Sage5 2 года назад +3

    We have a bunch of (purple top)beets(broadcasted before the field was disced for the planter to come through with the sorghum) interplanted with our sorghum-sudan field. We are working on fixing the soil in that particular plot and so far, those 2 crops, along with a few beans and some corn, it's doing well for the first year. In the home garden I grew some hakurei turnips. Those i hand seeded. Those are very good and didnt last long, even with the kids. Central Arkansas here. Thank you for another informational and humorous video.

  • @B.LoerincHelft
    @B.LoerincHelft 10 месяцев назад +2

    We intercrop beets with garlic to keep away leaf miner.

  • @ozzyeyre
    @ozzyeyre 2 года назад +16

    Absolutely love your channel! (I'll preface this comment with 'while I have plenty of disasters', so it doesn't seem like I'm bragging !) we have no problems with multi-sowing beets and follow Charles Dowding's method of twisting out the largest in the cluster, rather than pulling so most of the roots stay in the soil, leaving the rest to swell before repeating the process. Works for us in the UK - might it be a climate thing?

    • @rik80280
      @rik80280 Год назад

      I have had great great luck with multi sowing beets. But you do have to take care when you’re harvesting, which might not work as well for a busy farmer.

  • @denisefoster01df
    @denisefoster01df 11 месяцев назад

    Good morning from the uk 🇬🇧, I have just started growing this year and beetroot is on the menu, I have only grown them out side up to now, I have just had a poly tunnel and I am going to plant some from seed and some from transplant and see how we go, we love beetroot ❤

  • @meanqkie2240
    @meanqkie2240 Год назад +1

    When I was a kid in the 60s, I remember my Grandma and parents growing a garden in our hard dry clay dirt in SW Okla. they always grew some beets and some turnips. I love hot buttered beets, and I now use stevia to sweeten the pickling vinegar for beet pickled eggs. I remember Grandma’s beet pickles! I’m going to throw some seed out and see how they do this year! I’m in zone 7 now.

  • @NickyBigatto25
    @NickyBigatto25 6 месяцев назад

    I'm plantin beets and Chard about 8in apart, 12in row spacing. I give em a lot of room to fill out to their full potential. They seem to fill this space out no prob. Customers are impressed with the leaf size and taste. I just need them to tell their friends. I be growin way more Beets this season. !Toot Toot I'm a Moose!

  • @One29Homestead
    @One29Homestead 2 года назад +2

    I refuse to direct sow beets anymore. This was a big year of learning about beets. Soil blocks, give them some space and don't fertilize. Fall is going to be fun here at the homestead growing a bunch of beets. Thanks for all the awesome info you provide on this program

  • @marschlosser4540
    @marschlosser4540 Год назад +1

    New York is known for quality onions. Fields were going barren and compacked due to too much water. They planted sorghum, some grazing others mowing it off for one season. Next year onions were planted and harvests were up to old yields.

  • @alph8654
    @alph8654 2 года назад +2

    I have had pretty good success with multi sowing. My beats usually size up pretty good after pulling the bigger ones. Some do not, but all in all not bad. I had been starting them in trays. Just a couple of days ago i took an old mop handle and made a little indent in the soil and added 3 seeds per indent. I spaced them about 8 inches apart. I am hoping that is works for me. I friend told me he has been doing it that way with good results. I am just a gardener growing for me and my land owner.

  • @scottrichard1528
    @scottrichard1528 Год назад +2

    Zone 4b grower in Northern Wyoming. Our big problem with beets is with root aphids. We started using a special nematode from Arbico and I think its getting better. Great video.

    • @wirelesscaller7518
      @wirelesscaller7518 Год назад

      Watching your cold, amazed you can grow gardens Feb ! Thursday 23rd 100 sunny here in tropics! Weird weather here!

  • @cbak1819
    @cbak1819 2 года назад +2

    Every beet I grow either never gets a bulb.. or is so small.. nice greens tho.. and they are my fav cooking green.
    Thank you for your info!

  • @tinad6812
    @tinad6812 4 месяца назад

    Fun fact: I have been successfully growing beets in my backyard garden. I grow extra every year to share with the goldfinch that perch on them and eat the greens. I think they are cute and I like to watch them so I don’t mind sharing and growing extra. It would be easy to think the big holes in the leaves was from an insect but they are actually from birds. I may cover some this year and leave some for them exposed. 😊

  • @ZacWithaC
    @ZacWithaC 3 месяца назад

    JADAM Sulfur works very well for treating leaf spot. 1 tsp added to a gallon of water with 4 oz of wetting agent (JADAM wetting agent or dr bronner’s) applied as a foliar spray

  • @nancypingreehoover
    @nancypingreehoover Год назад +7

    A ton of great information here! I'm going to be planting beets for the first time this fall and I was looking for excellent info on how to best plant and care for them. Thank you! LOVE your channel! 👍

  • @nithishkumar2562
    @nithishkumar2562 2 года назад +2

    Hello from red beet grower from India... Leaf miner, fruit borer and cercospora leaf spot these are the major issues in our area...

  • @nikanj6
    @nikanj6 2 года назад +5

    So glad you popped up in my feed. Definitely subscribing. Everything I was looking for to fine tune my beginner beet growing experience. Seems like they would grow okay on containers too.

  • @scientificexplorergirl3374
    @scientificexplorergirl3374 2 года назад +3

    Celery. You are welcome. Great videos!

  • @susanmeredith5456
    @susanmeredith5456 2 года назад +2

    Love the comedy injected into your educational videos! Your humor is hard to 'beet'! LOL

  • @richardcooney7789
    @richardcooney7789 Год назад +1

    I like Beet greens to eat cooked , I also cook both the tops and the bottoms and freeze them for winter .

  • @helenpenner9899
    @helenpenner9899 2 года назад +1

    "I will say borscht is a really fun word to say" 😆

  • @MrCjallaby
    @MrCjallaby 2 года назад +3

    Toronto, Zone 5. Leaf miner affects our transplanted beets much more than direct-seeded. I think we get the leaf miner on the flats to begin with and then the added stress of transplanting makes the plants more susceptible perhaps. I think we are also transplanting too late. We use old row cover, double or tripled up to improve germination of direct-seeded beets, a technique recommended by Ben Hartman (not specifically for beets, any DS crop). The row cover warms the soil and retains moisture. We've blocked off every other hole on our Earthway beet plate but lately I've been thinking that the stand is too sparse, or been having trouble with germination (maybe every third hole is the sweet spot). It is crazy how much seed the Earthway eats up though with no modifications to the beet plate. Thinning is time-consuming but the result is very nice and superior to transplanted beets in my opinion (although I still transplant the chioggia/golden beets due to poor germination, as alluded in the video). Interesting the point about not being able to do thinning harvest on beet clumps from transplant. Just the other day Charles Dowding released a video about doing just that, and recommended twisting the beets out of the clump to avoid disturbing the other beets. Now I don't know what to think.

    • @notillgrowers
      @notillgrowers  2 года назад

      Lot of great info- thank you! And I’ll have to watch Charles’ video-hadn’t seen it yet

    • @Mrsnufleupagus
      @Mrsnufleupagus 2 года назад

      Central Alberta, zone 3b. I prefer transplanted to DS. I do NOT have my roller size dialed in and find the patchy germination and dense parts that need thinning annoying. The spacing we get with transplants is perfect and 3 rows on a 30" bed works great. In fairness, for us to get 2 crops out of a square foot in 90 frost free days means I lean very heavily towards transplants. Regarding the pulling the big one and the small one won't grow from transplants, that is inaccurate. We transplanted a row early in the greenhouse and had no issues with the small one becoming a sellable sized beet in short order. I do use the twist method, not clear if that makes a difference to just pulling straight out.

  • @earthwyrm6756
    @earthwyrm6756 Год назад

    Store seeds in a cooler to moderate temperature changes. Jars to control humidity. Envelopes labeled with variety, date and source/supplier.

  • @twngrl56
    @twngrl56 Год назад +1

    Thank You for your Info 🙂 We Like the Darker Red Beets as they seem to have richer sweet flavor. By the way, we love Beet Greens saute'd with bacon, onions, etc. They help hubby's blood glucose levels. (can't say they do for everyone, but they do for him)

  • @anerawewillneverforget
    @anerawewillneverforget 6 месяцев назад

    Lacto-fermented beetroot with ginger is awesome 😀

  • @Ninabeana13
    @Ninabeana13 Год назад +2

    I’ve tried everything and have researched sooo much. For the life of me I cannot get beets to bulb. I’ve tried directly sewing, transplanting, container growing, everything!!! I’ve added, calcium, boron, and any other nutrients without too much nitrogen . I regularly add compost. The one I’m looking at right now the greens are only 3 inches tall since starting indoors in February, it has no bulb and pushed out of the soil a bit. All my attempts at beets for 4 seasons now and not one has bulbed more than half of my pinky finger width. I’m about to give up.

    • @noneyabeeswax3200
      @noneyabeeswax3200 Год назад

      I don’t know where you are located but mine have done really well under a shade cloth the best I’ve ever grown

  • @Makemydayoutdoors
    @Makemydayoutdoors 3 месяца назад

    I live in the pacific north west area, i had a horrible beat leaf miner problem last year, neem oil was my answer.

  • @austinwilloughby3439
    @austinwilloughby3439 Год назад

    Love pickled beets! I make and sell them , a lot of them ! This fall will sell 8.00 a pint! Can't make enough! Love the videos! Keep making! Happy Planting! Marlene a farmer from SC!

  • @carolinablonde88
    @carolinablonde88 2 года назад +2

    Please do make all the beat puns 🙌 I love puns and my last name is Bean....and I'm a farmer. The puns there are endless. 🤣

  • @Colorado80474
    @Colorado80474 Год назад +1

    You got me, beet lovin' new subscriber here! That was a bunch of great information that I didn't know, even though I've been planting beets in our Colorado hoop house at 8600' for several years. Thanks for the good vid, I'll go look and see what else you've got!

  • @noneyabeeswax3200
    @noneyabeeswax3200 Год назад +1

    I absolutely cannot stand beets but I love growing them they are very challenging and look so nice growing in the garden,I too am in KY and have an issue with the spotting,I took to using a shade cloth this year and they are doing very well the best I’ve ever grown I wish I had put the cloth immediately after planting as the rabbits had their way with 30-40% of them but I replanted those areas.

  • @matthewbrearley9587
    @matthewbrearley9587 2 года назад +1

    I do use Paperpot with good success, I have used 5 cm and 10 cm with success with one seed per cell. I also use a Earthway seeder but does drop a lot of seed per drop and requires a lot of thinning

  • @jsunshinejull
    @jsunshinejull 22 дня назад

    The veg that likes poorly draining soils is watercress. And it's delicious! Maybe nasturtium, too. They're related...

  • @casualgardeningwithdustin
    @casualgardeningwithdustin Год назад

    In my old garden leaf miners were an absolute menace- to the point that I lost all my beets for a season. The following year I grew under insect netting and things were 100% better. Even in a small garden the common advice of inspecting for eggs and removing infested leaves just didn't seem to work for me. I spent hours each week patrolling for leaf miner eggs and tunnels and it got me precisely nowhere.
    I'm so glad to hear that leaf miners aren't an issue where you are! Fingers crossed that here in my new zone 6 garden I'll have gotten away from them as well. If not, at least I know, now, to grow under cover.

  • @chayasuperfood
    @chayasuperfood Год назад +1

    Good job I like this garden

  • @abigailj5689
    @abigailj5689 Год назад +1

    Where I grew up the front yard would be under water every rain in the rainy season. Wild onions thrived in it. We have clay soil. That's the only vegetable I know of that does well in very por draining soil.

  • @waynesell3681
    @waynesell3681 Год назад +1

    Great listening to your beet growing on your scale. Home gardening in Michigan zone 5 b. Growing in-ground beds 4ft by twelve. Six of them, plus another thirty by thirty feet. Thanks!

  • @digsindirt4490
    @digsindirt4490 Год назад +2

    I always thought root crops were supposed to be direct seeded. I like the idea of starting them in larger soil blocks. That might help me a lot. Thank you!

  • @hackiehackerson
    @hackiehackerson 2 месяца назад

    I just on a whim bought a couple trays of beets. I almost never try anything different. there were many in each compartment and they handled separation great. the greens look really healthy too a few weeks later. fingers crossed lol

  • @petrosros
    @petrosros 11 месяцев назад

    Dredge is salt and roast covered with paper and foil. Far more intense flavour, and they clean easily from the oven to under cold tap, the white and gold are my favourites. In the UK, we nearly always have them with diluted vinegar, I use cider apple and garlic, serve as a salad. And it is not true that you should not roast the red ones with the light one, it does not affect color when you mix them in a salad. That said, if you don't like them you probably never will, and Borsch is a yes.

  • @confidenshal-learnwithkay1511
    @confidenshal-learnwithkay1511 Год назад

    Hi now I understand why my beet leaves are looking that way. I planted beets between tomato plants and kale plants hoping that these plants would grow and shade over the beets. However, it seems that they are not growing fast enough. My beet leaves are now brown and dead looking. I grow beets for the root, but find that the leaves are very healthy and tasty. We've been having some real warm and dry climate here in zone 6a Canada

  • @shawnfurlong6578
    @shawnfurlong6578 Год назад +1

    Thanks for the "beet-down", great advice as always!

  • @treasuretreereynolds1764
    @treasuretreereynolds1764 2 года назад +2

    You made me smile this morning, so thank you! Great beet advice.

  • @moristar
    @moristar Год назад +1

    Hey! A person from the BORSCHT birth place (a.k.a. Ukraine). We consume a lot of beets, and we always seed them in open fields in May and collect in fall. We never ever get to buy beets with leaves (they go to animal feed) and we almost never buy\sell small beets for salads (maybe in the recent years a bEEt, due to the Western influence), always the big ones.
    Thanks for the new perspective on this so familiar plant. I'll try your method up soon :)

    • @vieslavabienek5063
      @vieslavabienek5063 4 месяца назад

      You mentioned"i have Ukraine roots" and you do not consume the beets leaves.I am Polish(immigrated to Canada)and still making the best Ukrainien borshcht using yung beets(or any) with leaves,plus adding other vegies and even beans,lemon juice and cream at the end,delishious.I am dissapointed in your knowledge about your country cousine.Mabe borned too late.Regards.

    • @moristar
      @moristar 4 месяца назад

      ​@@vieslavabienek5063 we have a saying in Ukraine: "Every housewife has own Borscht recipe". However, I've seen Borscht with fish (from the Southern Ukrain), "Green Borscht" with sorrel (a type of sour leafy green), I definitely ate and even cooked Borscht with beans (which is traditional is some, but not all parts of Ukraine), but I have never heard of anyone putting beet leaves into Borscht.
      But it's possible. Original meaning of the word Borcht is a "sour soup" (kwasnyi soup), so I guess your Polish zhurek could be considered a type of Borscht :D.
      The thing here is that there is a canonical "Ukrainian Borscht" which is in everyone's mind, when the word is said. And it is pretty much a fixed recipe with a few nuances (like whether to add beans or mushrooms and when to put cabbage in the pot or if the garlic paste necessary). Older versions of Borscht were even based on pickled beets, but nowadays the sourness is often achieved with vinegar (or in you case with very "Eastern-European" lemons :D).
      I know from experience that life in emigration tends to instil am idealised feeling of culture back home and desire to preserve it, but you also need to realise, that culture changes with the environment (both physical and social), so be real and hope your Borscht tastes gread! Na zdorowie!

    • @vieslavabienek5063
      @vieslavabienek5063 3 месяца назад

      @@moristar Hi,Looks like you felt offended by my remarks.Barszcz to nie kwasna zupa.Beets are very sweet itself so adding some garlic and lemon juice kills the sweetness of the beets and do not waste the leafs,they are being compare with kale{which i do not like).Zurek?.It is sour soup,made from fermented(usually)rye flouer,then mixed with broth,potatos,bacon or sausages,garlic and by adding hard boiled eggs makes a meal(probiotics from fermented flour).Enaugh said.Good luck.

    • @moristar
      @moristar 3 месяца назад

      @@vieslavabienek5063 you need to understand that borscht was originally made with pickled beets. Also, beets were not that sweet back in the day and they are still not super sweet in Ukraine. Most people add sugar to Ukrainian Borscht.Even the word borsch comes from the plant which was a bit tangy in flavours (as a proper borscht needs to be).
      My point its - a borscht nowadays is a lot of thing, and surely for a polak\polacka in Canada it's another thing than for ukrainets\ukrainka in Ukraine, but there is historic tradition and there is a common practice that can't be ignored.
      Cześć!

  • @katkur9731
    @katkur9731 Год назад

    Thank you for this informative video. I’m in SE Tennessee and I am going to try to grow beets for the first time this fall. Beets are one of the vegetables my husband likes, so I really want them to be successful. Yours look fantastic! Thank you again, and any other tips are greatly appreciated!

  • @nathanwooldridge85
    @nathanwooldridge85 2 года назад +1

    No.1 - I'm awesome! ;)
    No.2 - I know Charles Dowding raves about multi-sown beets (along with most things), but I haven't had any good experience in my home garden environment of pulling one beet and the remaining ones sizing up at all. I'll revert to single seed planting and try my luck at that

    • @jeffreylyons1531
      @jeffreylyons1531 2 года назад

      I always plant in 3’s, some varieties come up tangled others don’t and you can just pick one

    • @notillgrowers
      @notillgrowers  2 года назад

      I haven't seen Charles' videos on beets. I'll have to see if he does something different than I do. And yeah, it could be a varietal thing.

  • @lynnreed6587
    @lynnreed6587 Год назад

    I LOVE beet greens! And my chickens LOVE the beets. Win-win!

  • @lablover1972
    @lablover1972 Год назад

    I love eating beet greens with my lettuces.. or even alone. Great on sandwiches and burgers also.

  • @scottmac007
    @scottmac007 Год назад +2

    I dont use Johnny seeds anymore after finding out they buy some of their seeds from Seminis a subsidiary of Monsanto. I try my best to make sure not a penny of my money go to that evil company!

    • @PNH-sf4jz
      @PNH-sf4jz Год назад

      It might be worth doing a websearch of "Johnny's Selected Seeds", "Territorial Seeds" & Monsanto in any combination to find out more about any relationship, or otherwise, past and, or present, between these companies.
      The following details with a detailed explanation and the included invitation to pass the details on may be of help.
      Northwest Edible Life
      February 26, 2018 Gardening by Erica
      December 30, 2012 Gardening by Erica
      Urban homesteading in the pacific northwest
      Please feel free to pass this along when you see - as you will - misinformation or confusion about this issue.

  • @karladenton5034
    @karladenton5034 2 года назад +1

    I was disappointed in my beets this spring, but that was because we went from 60s to 90s in ten days here in Kansas this spring and the poor babies just couldn't cope. (And I don't blame them!) I'm currently trying a second crop, and I think I'll do a third under the tomato plants.

  • @marcydobbs1653
    @marcydobbs1653 2 года назад

    I'm going to try again after watching this 6a Kentucky. Home garden only, but in raised beds. I interplant veggies with flowers and herbs. So far Japanese beetles have been the worst pest. The beets didn't even try. Now I know why. Thanks.

    • @Cherryparfait41
      @Cherryparfait41 2 года назад

      Same here in southern Ohio…haven’t had this amount of pressure from them in years. Lol, I told my daughter when you can swish them with bare fingers you know you’re next level. 😅

  • @zerpblerd5966
    @zerpblerd5966 2 года назад +1

    I like big beets and I cannot lie