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I found some carrots from Seed Savers Exchange. They're Paris Market. They're shaped like beets and get 1-2" dia. French Heirloom. Says they do well in shallow or rocky soil. 50-68 days. I have not planted them yet (going in the 15th) so I can't attest to how they grow, but it sounds like they might be perfect for our gardens.
David Waite said:
Carrots are slow and growth rates are disappointing. Onions leeks and garlic are all positive. size ranges are all over the map from silver dollar to softball. The cabbage doesnt belong but it was part of the harvest. So for the discussion root crops continue to be very productive and worth growing. I have rudabaga and will update when its time to harvest. Part of my problem on carrots are high ph which they dont prefer. I am going to plant round two of all root crops and see how they do this fall. Hope to carry them over this winter and harvest all winter with minimal to no heat. The experiment continues.
Hi David,
Hi David,
Hello all root crop growers. I would like to aske everyone if they have seen vastly different results based on the water flow patterns employed in their root crop beds? I had flood and drain in the sand bed to start off with, and the beets were really not all that happy. I started over, and added a surface distrubution grid over the unit, with a balancing valve on the outflow to ensure that the NFT does not overflow. The result is now that the bed only floods about half-way to the top at most, but the sand still gets a good wetting every hour. The plant growth change has been immediately obvious. I'm working on the assumption that a dry (relatively dry in any case) media with frequent surface trickling is much better than traditional flood and drain.
Well then David, it looks like my approach is a bit different and worth keeping it going to see what the different flow patterns result in. There could also be obvious sand / gravel differences in how the plants respond. I wet once an hour over the surface of the sandwith filtered water. I will keep going like this - p.s. the potato is also in this bed getting the same treatment.
I've seen some carrots rotting in my gravel beds lately. I think this is probably more to do with the heat and perhaps pests because I have gotten carrots to grow fine in flood and drain gravel and even constant flood gravel in the past.
I have noticed that the taste of the carrots from my big system isn't as sweet as the ones grown in good compost.
Beets did well where the ants didn't do damage.
Most of my flood and drain gets flooded once an hour but I have a few that get flooded every ten minutes.
Hi David,
Can you tell us if you are adding any other oganic fertilizers to grow rootcrops in your aquaponics system? The other question is what kind of food you are feeding your fish? I know potatoes don't like wet feet, my suggestion is to grow it in a different GB into dry medium such as perlite or compost overlaid cocconut coir using its wick action to water the plants.
Thank you for any information. Safwat
I know most root crops need potassium to grow well so if your system is short of potassium you may have trouble. I know my big system has a problem not only with the Iron lock out due to high pH but.....
Also because of the overabundance of calcium (shells as 40% of media=too much calcium carbonate) in that system the potassium tends to precipitate out of solution and I see lots of potassium deficiency issues too.
Still searching for more plants that like the alkali water. Watercress is great in winter here but the heat just decimates it so need more greedy plants for summer (other than bananas.)
Uh, I suppose you could sort of think of water chestnuts as root crops and they seem to be doing well for me in the wet alkali conditions but they don't seem quite as greedy as the cress.
Hi Kabus
From my experience I found that most of plants don't need wet feet, just a continous light moisture around their roots so they can breath, the best approach in this case is using a wick system thru adding perlite on the top of cocconut coir or clay pebbles in the flood and drain unit
This way it is easier also to plant rootcrops than planting directly into the gravels.
Kobus Jooste said:
Hello all root crop growers. I would like to aske everyone if they have seen vastly different results based on the water flow patterns employed in their root crop beds? I had flood and drain in the sand bed to start off with, and the beets were really not all that happy. I started over, and added a surface distrubution grid over the unit, with a balancing valve on the outflow to ensure that the NFT does not overflow. The result is now that the bed only floods about half-way to the top at most, but the sand still gets a good wetting every hour. The plant growth change has been immediately obvious. I'm working on the assumption that a dry (relatively dry in any case) media with frequent surface trickling is much better than traditional flood and drain.
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