Tuesday 9 June 2020

Finger carrots

In addition to devoting most of one of my raised beds to growing "big" carrots, I'm also having a go with a few of the little carrots which people call "Finger carrots" or "Cocktail carrots". This type is typically small and proportionally long and thin - like these ones I grew in 2017:


The best variety of Finger carrot seems to be "Amsterdam", which comes in various versions such as "Amsterdam 2", "Amsterdam 3" etc. I bought a pack of "Amsterdam 2 Solo" from Wilko, for the princely sum of 50p. A pack contains at least 200 seeds, which is more than enough for my needs.

On May 24th I sowed a generous number (maybe 25 - 30?) of the seeds in each of two tall pots filled with finely sieved soil with a bit of added compost. You definitely want to remove any stones. In the hot weather, they germinated in just a few days. [NB: keep the soil moist to improve germination rates.]


Now those pots are actually quite small in diameter so I will definitely be thinning out the carrot seedlings in order to leave maybe 12 or 15 in each pot.


The seeds hadn't all germinated when I took these photos. It's a good idea to wait until you judge that all those that are going to come up have come up, then you can remove the ones you don't want, leaving the others reasonably well-spaced.


During summertime carrots like these will take 2 - 3 months to develop fully. In the meantime I'll be making sure to water them frequently, but I'll stand the pots in saucers and water them from the bottom, so that the carrots put out long roots to search for the moisture.

With a bit of luck I'll end up with a small number of very special carrots, ideal for eating raw as a snack - maybe a pre-dinner Nibble like this!


4 comments:

  1. 1st sowing failed, will try again.

    ReplyDelete
  2. I didn't realise you could grow carrots in such small containers. I am now tempted to give them a go.

    ReplyDelete
  3. We're truing carrots in containers this year but none to pull yet,

    ReplyDelete
  4. There's really no need to thin them that much. I regularly grow 30 in a 10" pot (Nantes types and Sweet Candle usually, although I've grown Autumn King this way too). There are templates available on the net for sowing seeds equidistant in 10 and 12" pots but I often just chuck them in. Sowing seeds individually isn't that difficult: dip the end of a match stick into a small amount of water and use it to pick up the seeds and then deposit where you want them.

    ReplyDelete

Thank you for taking time to leave me a comment! Please note that Comment Moderation is enabled for older posts.