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  • Carrot Confusion

    OK I'm sorting out my seed box and looking at Carrots in particular and I'm suffering a little bit of Carrot confusion!

    I have two packs of Sugarsnax 54 F1 one from unwins and the other from Mr Fothergill's

    SOW

    Unwins April - June
    Fothergill March - July

    HARVEST

    Unwins Aug - March
    Fothergill June - November

    Click image for larger version

Name:	Carrots - Sugarsnax 54 F1.jpg
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ID:	2405423

    So who is right ?
    sigpic
    . .......Man Vs Slug
    Click Here for my Diary and Blog
    Nutters Club Member

  • #2
    Neither!

    I'd say Fothergill had a more accurate sowing date, while Unwins had a more realistic harvest date... at least for my part of the world!
    He-Pep!

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    • #3
      Snap, Cad! I sorted my carrot box last night
      I was looking for the earliest and latest varieties to sow (Jan - Amsterdam 3 (Sprint) MrF & Latest October = Nantes 2 Frubund T&M which can also be sown in Feb))
      The seed suppliers rarely agree about sowing and harvesting dates so I always "adjust" them by about a month - sowing a month earlier and a month later than the stated dates.
      Some suppliers have more "stretch" in their dates than others
      Last edited by veggiechicken; 04-10-2017, 11:38 AM. Reason: Found a January carrot :)

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      • #4
        Originally posted by Cadalot View Post
        OK I'm sorting out my seed box and looking at Carrots in particular and I'm suffering a little bit of Carrot confusion!

        I have two packs of Sugarsnax 54 F1 one from unwins and the other from Mr Fothergill's

        SOW

        Unwins April - June
        Fothergill March - July

        HARVEST

        Unwins Aug - March
        Fothergill June - November

        [ATTACH=CONFIG]77008[/ATTACH]

        So who is right ?
        Sugarsnax from Kings
        SOW - March - July
        HARVEST July - October

        Comment


        • #5
          I really must get my head around what companies are part of who because they are likely to be selling the same seed and giving the same advice.

          Thompson & Morgan - Sow March - July but Feb - March if in greenhouse or cloche

          Marshalls same as Unwin April - June

          Dobies same as Fothergill's March - July

          DT Brown March - June so a moth shorter than Fothergill's

          Chiltern Seeds same as Unwin April - June
          sigpic
          . .......Man Vs Slug
          Click Here for my Diary and Blog
          Nutters Club Member

          Comment


          • #6
            Originally posted by bario1 View Post
            Neither!

            I'd say Fothergill had a more accurate sowing date, while Unwins had a more realistic harvest date... at least for my part of the world!
            So Unwins treats them as an overwintering (maincrop) variety. That's interesting.

            Edited to add this:

            Early Nantes*2*Frubund**-*Feb - Oct********* *Apr - Nov

            So essentially, they're the only carrot you ever need grow all year round if you're happy with them. Has anyone tried them?
            Last edited by Snoop Puss; 04-10-2017, 10:55 AM.

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            • #7
              Actually, I've never grown Sugarsnax.... maybe they won't stand over winter?
              He-Pep!

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              • #8
                I couldn't get the sow by and harvest list to line up so here is the blog posting, a work in process and I'm still working out what and when Alans Allotment: In My Seed Box - Carrots 2018
                sigpic
                . .......Man Vs Slug
                Click Here for my Diary and Blog
                Nutters Club Member

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                • #9
                  Also T&M on their page say "Direct sow carrot seeds outdoors from March to July. Early varieties may also be sown from February to March in greenhouse borders or under cloches. Specific autumn sowing carrot varieties can be sown as late as October under cloches for an early crop in spring. Grow Carrots in a weed free, sunny position in fertile, light, well drained soil. Carrots dislike freshly manured soils so seed beds are best prepared in autumn, well in advance of spring sowings."

                  So do they mean Sugarsnaps 54 F1 as the only one I have seen that can be grown to overwinter is Early Nantes 2 Frubund with a sowing range of February - October
                  Last edited by Cadalot; 04-10-2017, 11:07 AM.
                  sigpic
                  . .......Man Vs Slug
                  Click Here for my Diary and Blog
                  Nutters Club Member

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                  • #10
                    Snoop - Penellype grows Nantes Frubund.

                    There only seem to be one supplier of Frubund seeds - T&M. 500 seeds = £2.99. Luckily for me, they were 50p in the seed sale.

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                    • #11
                      VC I bought far to many carrot varieties in the Wyevale 50p seed sale but who can blame me when I'm getting £34.21 of carrot seeds for £6 or putting it another way 12 packs for the RRP of 2 it's a no brainer.

                      I'm doing a row of each and seeing which ones I like the best. My plan is to start the shorter varieties off in loo rolls in the greenhouse.
                      Last edited by Cadalot; 04-10-2017, 11:29 AM.
                      sigpic
                      . .......Man Vs Slug
                      Click Here for my Diary and Blog
                      Nutters Club Member

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                      • #12
                        My best carrots always turn out to be 'Rainbow Mix' - I'm assuming they're a mix of at least three varieties, but who knows what those individual varieties actually are?
                        He-Pep!

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                        • #13
                          Originally posted by Snoop Puss View Post
                          So Unwins treats them as an overwintering (maincrop) variety. That's interesting.

                          Edited to add this:

                          Early Nantes*2*Frubund**-*Feb - Oct********* *Apr - Nov

                          So essentially, they're the only carrot you ever need grow all year round if you're happy with them. Has anyone tried them?
                          I always grow Nantes Frubund. They are reliable and cold tolerant, make decent sized good flavoured carrots, and you can have carrots for most of the year. Do not expect carrots in a few weeks - that is a fantasy unless you like them very, very small. If you let them dry out too much some of them will bolt.

                          I have done the following, all with some success:
                          Sow maincrop carrots in pots in March - April. Ready to eat as small carrots in late June and by September expect decent sized roots providing you haven't sown them too thickly. These will stand over winter and are likely to start becoming tough and woody as they start to regrow in March. When frost is forecast I make sure I bring a pot into the garage so that I can still harvest if the ground is frozen.
                          Carrots sown in pots in May are smaller, even when left to grow over winter and I see little point in doing this as they still start growing in March.
                          Carrots can be sown in an unheated greenhouse in September to produce finger sized roots by the following May.
                          I've also grown these indoors under lights then on the windowsill in 9 inch tall 5.5 inch square pots, sowing in January and harvesting in May-June.
                          Most of my pots are about a foot deep and are either 18 inch square pots of 30 litre buckets. I did once grow these in an old water butt and a few of those carrots grew really big.

                          So really the only time you will struggle to have carrots to eat if you sow in March-April, September (greenhouse) and January (indoors) is late March to early May.
                          A life is like a garden. Perfect moments can be had, but not preserved, except in memory. LLAP. - Leonard Nimoy

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                          • #14
                            Originally posted by Cadalot View Post
                            Also T&M on their page say "Direct sow carrot seeds outdoors from March to July. Early varieties may also be sown from February to March in greenhouse borders or under cloches. Specific autumn sowing carrot varieties can be sown as late as October under cloches for an early crop in spring. Grow Carrots in a weed free, sunny position in fertile, light, well drained soil. Carrots dislike freshly manured soils so seed beds are best prepared in autumn, well in advance of spring sowings."

                            So do they mean Sugarsnaps 54 F1 as the only one I have seen that can be grown to overwinter is Early Nantes 2 Frubund with a sowing range of February - October
                            Other cold tolerant varieties I've tried are Eskimo (T&M) and Marion (Marshalls), both of which did well. Eskimo is apparently the one the farmers grow to harvest in winter - they cover the rows with straw to stop the ground freezing and harvest them for the shops all through the winter. Both varieties are decent carrots.
                            A life is like a garden. Perfect moments can be had, but not preserved, except in memory. LLAP. - Leonard Nimoy

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