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Old January 29, 2016   #19
TexasTycoon
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Join Date: May 2015
Location: Round Rock, TX, Zone 8b
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Originally Posted by kath View Post
Still buried in snow and experiencing the cold of winter, I've been enjoying your thread, Kelly!

Here's what I've heard with regard to carrot and sand. Some people recommend mixing your carrot seeds with sand in order to be able to sow them more thinly in the rows, thereby cutting down on the tedious job of thinning them later. I've also heard of people making a shallow trough for sowing and then covering the seeds with a shallow layer of sand so that the seeds have an easier time breaking through the soil after germination, but this is only if the natural soil has a tendency to form a hard crust when dry. The fluffier and less rocky the soil, the easier the carrots can form long straight roots. Carrot roots tend to fork when they come in contact with stones and debris. My guess is that adding sand to some soils may loosen it up a bit. People that have heavy soils tend to grow the varieties that are thicker and stubbier or the ones that are shaped like golf balls, I think.

Since you're growing in a container mix, I'm not sure how the sand would help, if the soilless mix is peat-based.

Not sure if this is helpful to you, but that's all I can say about carrots and sand.

kath
That is very helpful, thank you! I think I'll hold off on running to get some sand this time around. I'm starting to venture into the overthinking-it territory and that's not what I want to do this year.

I'm glad I can share a little bit of green with those of y'all who won't see any for a while yet! It's supposed to be in the mid 70s here all weekend, but next week it will drop down to the 50s (and lower at night) which should be better for my carrots. We've had an unseasonably warm winter so far, so I'm glad it's at least allowing me to get things growing sooner.
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-Kelly
"To plant a garden is to believe in tomorrow." - Audrey Hepburn
Bloom where you are planted.
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