Beetroot not forming bulbs

Started by kt., May 09, 2009, 22:29:41

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kt.

Almost 2 months ago I sowed some boltardy beetroot in a plastic container in my greenhouse.  3-4 inch spacings.  There is also some spring onions and carrots in the same container, both doing fine.  I now have 6 inch tall I sowed some I thought I should of had babysized beetroot but no Will they fatten up or do I need to thin them a bit more? 

All you do and all you see is all your life will ever be

kt.

All you do and all you see is all your life will ever be

Eristic

At 3-4 inch spacings you should be OK. Personally I think you are a bit impatient. All good things come to those that wait. Keep well watered and don't forget to feed.

I grow beet to golfball size in my polystyrene boxes when space permits in the polytunnel.

telboy

Crikey kt, you started early!
Plant some seeds out as well, germination is fast at the mo.
Eskimo Nel was a great Inuit.

kt.

Quote from: telboy on May 09, 2009, 22:41:45
Crikey kt, you started early!
Plant some seeds out as well, germination is fast at the mo.
Started early under glass for an early crop ::) ::)    Just sowed 2 rows of Boltardy outdoors last weekend as a first for monthly successional sowing through till July / August
All you do and all you see is all your life will ever be

1066

Hi, I'm new to growing Beetroot and have a couple of Q's. Roughly how long from sowing to eating?! basically mine are about 4" high and I'm going to plant them out in the next couple of days, so how long to maturity? I'm growing Detroit if that helps

Thanks
1066

kt.

Quote from: 1066 on May 12, 2009, 12:53:54
Roughly how long from sowing to eating?! how long to maturity? I'm growing Detroit if that helps

Usually around 14 weeks.

All you do and all you see is all your life will ever be

1066


daxzen

beetroot is a great crop leave are great in salads take a leaf off each plant - they dont miss them!

the old view was that you could transplant them and that they are best sown thinly in situ my wife has perfected transplanting the thinnings into catch crop positions

i have not tried growing them in cells - let me know how they go!

1066

daxzen, yes I'll let you know how I get on, to be honest I'm only really doing them in cells as I'm on heavy clay that is gradually getting more workable but still not capable of sowing in situ, I do this with the majority of stuff I grow.
Also planning on doing some later sowings

Quote from: daxzen on May 12, 2009, 13:25:52

my wife has perfected transplanting the thinnings into catch crop positions  /quote]

That's something I'd also like to perfect but am way off that yet!!

1066

daxzen

it will be great to know how you get on

the seedlings that she transplanta re at two three leaf stage max - i guess my wife's secret is to allow the tap root to keep growing without a check




Old bird

I have never given much thought much about beetroot!

I generally bung the seeds in - up it comes - and it gets eaten as leaves in salad and when the bulb looks about the right size then I have beetroot.

I start from golf ball size to wherever it goes to!

I have never had to transplant them or anything tho - I thought that they  generally considered "easy" like radish or so!

Old Bird

;D


daxzen

 me too
but beetroot s so easy and many people ignore it

beetroot is a staple in my book and the more i can get into my diet the better

we pickle it as we get a glut and keep pating right through to september

some of my stuff overwintered in a depp bed with heavy mulch - good eating and fresh as we needed it

1066

Quote from: Old bird on May 12, 2009, 14:34:58
I have never had to transplant them or anything tho - I thought that they  generally considered "easy" like radish or so!

Old Bird

;D


I think they are meant to be easy, but as a 1st timer its always nice to check and besides that lump of clay I have that is called my allotment does determine how I do things  ;D

1066

manicscousers

we kept some over winter in damp compost, the leaves kept growing and we were eating them in salads until 3 weeks ago  ;D
mind you, the last bulbs were woody

sawfish

its the one veg I just cant seem to grow well at all, no matter what I do. I'm constantly moaning about it on this forum.

>:(

shirlton

We always start some off in Feb in cells and these just become edible a few weeks before the outdoor sowings. You don't gain that much from sowing in cells but we are impatient. so even a week is ok.
When I get old I don't want people thinking
                      "What a sweet little old lady"........
                             I want em saying
                    "Oh Crap! Whats she up to now ?"

greenstar

Maybe it's a Glasgow thing Sawfish - I've never managed to get anything worth eating off them either.  I'm still trying them again this year - this is the first time that I've tried sowing them in a seed tray and transplanting them when they've germinated.  They've been outside for about two week now and aren't looking particularly happy.

Eristic

Forget any nonsense about not being able to transplant beetroot. It's at least as easy as cabbages.

I sow my seeds in 3" pots, transplant them to boxes then transplant them again to the big outside world. Not only does this give me more control but saves a lot of growing space as they are only out in rows to fatten up.

grannyjanny

We have a lovely gentleman on our site, 80 this year. He transplants his beetroot, the cylindrical one & he says that the transplanted ones are ready quicker than the ones he leaves in.
Janet

sawfish

Quote from: greenstar on May 12, 2009, 21:04:33
Maybe it's a Glasgow thing Sawfish - I've never managed to get anything worth eating off them either.  I'm still trying them again this year - this is the first time that I've tried sowing them in a seed tray and transplanting them when they've germinated.  They've been outside for about two week now and aren't looking particularly happy.

I've done it all greenstar, lots of ways.

good luck

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