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Beetroot

Started by sandersj89, February 23, 2005, 11:30:34

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D you sow beetroot in ground manured in the last 6 months or on un-maured ground?

Manured
5 (20%)
Un-Manured
20 (80%)

Total Members Voted: 25

sandersj89

I have been reading conflicting advice about planting beetroot. Some say avoid manured ground, other say it is OK. So what do you do and what are the reasons for avoiding manure if you do so?

Thanks

Jerry
Caravan Holidays in Devon, come stay with us:

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sandersj89

Caravan Holidays in Devon, come stay with us:

http://crablakefarm.co.uk/

I am now running a Blogg Site of my new Allotment:

http://sandersj89allotment.blogspot.com/

Sarah-b

Last year, I sowed as an after thought on freshly manured - and beetroot was one of my successes. But have also read the advice and was going to sow on un-fresh this year...

sb

ALAN HOWELL

Hi Jerry...I have found beetroot to be unfussy,I rotate my crops each year and my beet crop has found itself on a variety of soils over the years but has still cropped well.Last year I changed my variety from Boltardy to Ferono...much nicer :) Alan
I GOT A LOTTA LOTTIE

Wicker

Havn't had access to reliable horse manure for several years so now my answer would be unmanured.  However, in the past beetroot has been moved around lottie whether in manured or unmanured ground - no memorable difference.
Equality isn't everyone being the same, equality is recognising that being different is normal.

gavin

Mine would go anywhere - they seem to be very unfussy and friendly, happy with either?  And yes, I like Forono too :)

All best - Gavin

tim

What are we coming to??

In the Co-op today, cooked beetroot with added saccharin!!

Ceri

I sow in spring in land that I mulched with seaweed in the autumn - they did very well last year

sandersj89

Thanks all, seems they are happy in either situation hence the conflicting advice out there.

Not grown them for years as did not have room, this year there will be a row at the allotment. Looking foward to roasted beetroot with a touch of walnut oil! Yum!

Jerry
Caravan Holidays in Devon, come stay with us:

http://crablakefarm.co.uk/

I am now running a Blogg Site of my new Allotment:

http://sandersj89allotment.blogspot.com/

Mothy

Jerry,

that sounds very nice....do you roast them in ordinary oil then drizzle with walnut oil afterwards?   :P

TimJ

sandersj89

Quote from: TimJ on February 24, 2005, 11:26:12
Jerry,

that sounds very nice....do you roast them in ordinary oil then drizzle with walnut oil afterwards?   :P

TimJ

Roast them or rather bake them really I suppose, I used to wrap them in foil in their skins and bake until a  knife slips through easily. Then remove the skin. Break them up a little and add a splash of walnut oil and maybe a bit of butter if feeling naughty.

Jerry
Caravan Holidays in Devon, come stay with us:

http://crablakefarm.co.uk/

I am now running a Blogg Site of my new Allotment:

http://sandersj89allotment.blogspot.com/

TULIP-23

Hi Jerry      Extract from  Vegetable and Herb Expert Dr. D.G. Hessayon. 8)

Soil Facts: Pick a Sunny Spot and dig in Autumn or early winter-add peat or well rotted compost. If the Humus content is low.

Apply lime if the soil is known to be acid.

In spring prepare the seed bed- rake in growmore fertilizer 2-3 weeks before sowing.

Hope thats a Help Jerry ???

Mike :)
Sometimes its better to listen than to talk

derbex

FWIW I tend to start mine multi-seeded in modules., partly because I use a thick mulch on some of the beds, and (in theory) to get a succession of them.

Jeremy.

busy_lizzie

We have always found it very easy to grow beetroot, but then we live at the coast (they supposedly like saltiness in the air/soil, I think).  We have always grown them in unmanured soil and like a lot of people here have found them very unfussy.  Just plant the seeds in the ground. I also replant the thinnings and they take very well.  Our most successfuly crop usually.  :) busy_lizzie
live your days not count your years

wardy

Jerry  -  I've never had roasted beetroot before but it sounds fantastic!  I have never grown it before but I have my seed (Detroit something or other) and I'm raring to go.  Weather permitting natch.  I have some walnut oil already so can't wait to get cooking.  I bought fresh, cooked beetroot, just tossed in sweet vinegar from Tesco last summer (from Spain apparently) but it was lovely so I'm inspired to grow my own.  Plus another lotty holder gave me some he'd grown.  I'd never before cooked it myself but I didn't know what I'd been missing.  Love it with mayo

Ta for the tip  :)
I came, I saw, I composted

gavin

Mmmm - baked beetroot is lovely; like the idea of walnut oil - I'll give that a go :) !

Another use for beetroot -  peel and grate raw beetroot (2 parts), and mix in some grated apple (1 part); a simple (yes, it is that simple!) salad, where sweetness and earthiness complement each other deliciously.

All best - Gavin

Multiveg

Quote from: tim on February 23, 2005, 19:30:04
What are we coming to??

In the Co-op today, cooked beetroot with added saccharin!!
WHAT!!!!

Roast beetroot is lovely (as is beetroot wine). Borscht is nice, but perhaps not with the Chioggia types as the colour doesn't quite look right!
Allotment Blog - http://multiveg.wordpress.com/
Musings of a letter writer, stamp user and occasional Postcrosser - http://correspondencefan.blogspot.co.uk/

frannie

i must be dead common - i just like cheese and beetroot sandwiches!  i've always just boiled it till the skin rubs off, then eat them still warm.  you can always keep any leftovers in a jar with some sweetened vinegar... if you get any leftovers, of course!

TULIP-23

Frannie :)
Also nice with Thinly sliced apple and Cheese Try It ;)
Sometimes its better to listen than to talk

Lily

My first crop of Beetroot was grown on unmanured soil.  It was a good crop but as it was my first crop I had nothing to compare it with, so I shall see how it does on manured soil.

I love eating Beetroot, but it does turn the old 'waterworks' a bright red if you eat too much :o

Lily
' A problem shared is a problem halved'

Mrs Ava

Mine go wherever I have space!  ::)  Warm beetroot, delish, roast beetroot, yum, raw beetroot, scrummy, beetroot leaves, spicey....and what strange and colourful things it can do to certain things a few hours later!  :o

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