I gave up growing carrots for a few years. I was failing at them; I got discouraged and quit. I first got back in the game because I was wearing the title “Master Gardener” and felt ashamed to do so while being incapable of something so fundamental.

And then the way I started growing carrots again was by experimenting with whether they could be grown by transplanting. (Yes — contrary to common advice — they can, as I wrote about in this post.) But I was truly hooked after harvesting those first transplants, when I saw how much my family loved having carrots to dig up in the garden whenever they felt like “eating like a bunny,” as my son called it.

So, over the last handful of years I’ve been focused on improving my carrot-growing skills. Here I share what I’ve found to be the keys to success on the topics of most importance to growing carrots in Southern California.

Timing and temperature

You’ll see on a packet of carrot seeds something like this, “Sow in early spring or late summer.” But that’s not entirely accurate for Southern California.

For Southern California, a seed packet should say, “Sow from late summer through early spring.” I think of it as mid September through winter and into early April.

Technically, we can grow carrots all year round, even in summer like most other climates in the country, but I wouldn’t. Or, I should say, I wouldn’t expect great results. A few years ago, I made a point of growing carrots every month of the year and found that the ones that grew through summer just didn’t taste very good. The plants always looked good, but the roots tasted disappointing: bland or bitter or tougher in texture.

The kids still ate the summer carrots, but they’ll eat anything!

Kids with a summer carrot harvest on September 9, 2019.

September is a great month to start growing carrots again, after the summer hiatus. Carrot seeds germinate fastest when the soil temperature is warm, between 65 and 85 degrees.

Fast-germinating carrot seeds: an oxymoron? It’s relative. According to this University of California chart, within that temperature range it takes carrots 6-7 days to emerge while in the colder soil temperatures of winter it might take around 20 days.

I sowed carrots on Monday, September 11, 2017 and then on Friday, September 15 I already noticed a couple of precocious germinators, like this little fellow:

That’s only five days! Here are some other sowing and germination dates I’ve recorded in the past:

Sowed October 19, emerged October 28 (9 days)

Sowed December 15, emerged January 5 (21 days)

Sowed January 22, emerged February 13 (21 days)

Carrot seedlings happily germinated on October 11, 2019.

Soil moisture for germination

As you can see, the carrot seeds started growing faster in the early fall when the soil temperature was warmer, and this is so convenient because carrots are annoyingly slow at germinating in general compared to almost every other vegetable. Why is the slow germination annoying? Because carrot seeds are tiny and have to be sown shallowly (barely cover them with a quarter-inch of soil or compost) and yet they have to be kept moist for the entire time they’re sitting there in the soil getting started with life. If you let the carrot seeds dry out, they’re dead. So the faster they germinate, the less time you have to stay focused on keeping them moist.

A crucial first step to successful carrot germination is soaking the soil before sowing. Get that dirt wet to at least two feet deep.

After that, a few tricks to keeping that soil moist include laying burlap or newspaper or shade cloth over the dirt that you’ve sowed carrot seeds in.

Germination under the shade cloth.

Alternatively, you can give the bed a showering every day. This will be sufficient even in September when afternoons are in the 80’s, but may not be quite enough during a period of heat or Santa Ana winds.

Soil texture and tilling

If you have a soil that forms a crust on top when it dries, that can be an obstacle for carrot germination. Adding compost to the surface helps prevent that crusting.

I spread composted horse manure on the surface of this bed just before sowing.

One last thing about dirt: it may not need to be dug up and loosened in order to produce good carrots. It depends on the dirt you’re working with. I have grown carrots in untilled dirt and found that they grew just as well and straight (or as poorly and forked) as in dirt I had tilled.

Straight carrots grown in untilled dirt. Who knows how long those little tap roots went ultimately?

Despite that, I’ve found that the harvesting of the carrots is easier if I’ve forked the dirt before sowing. If I use a four-tine garden fork to loosen the dirt in the bed before sowing, then at harvest my family and I can pull out the carrots easily without breaking them. I appreciate that so I usually fork a bed before sowing carrots.

My soil is sandy loam. Your soil might benefit from some forking or tilling before sowing carrots, or it might not. In a raised bed, forking or tilling is likely a waste of time. Try it both ways and see how it goes.

Varieties

Carrots of various colors are fun for the kids. Purple, white, yellow, orange: which will it be? When they harvest it adds an element of surprise. But the one downside is that the non-orange carrots never match the fine texture and flavor of the best orange carrots.

Note the fiber in the core of this otherwise beautiful, purple-skinned carrot.

I still grow a packet of mixed-color carrots every year because they are so fun. I often grow Renee’s Harlequin Mix.

But for overall eating preferences, Mokum is the favorite variety for my family. It’s a variety that is perfectly crisp but delicate and coreless. The flavor is also just-right sweet. See my post on Mokum here.

Mokum carrots sown February 3, 2021; harvest starting in April.

Bugs

Pill bugs and earwigs are two insects that love to eat carrot seedlings as soon as they emerge from the soil. Not controlling for these little pests was one of the biggest reasons for my carrot failings in the past.

I make sure a bed that I’m going to sow to carrots is bare for at least a week before sowing. This ensures that the pests aren’t hiding right there in the bed where I will sow.

I also sometimes run my chickens through the bed because they will eat all of those bugs.

Finally, for carrot sowings in winter, I sometimes cover the bed with tulle in order to prevent birds from eating the emerging seedlings, but I do not use shade cloth. Shade cloth gives pill bugs and earwigs a place to hide, and winter into spring is the time of year that their population is highest.

Tulle over a winter sowing of carrots.

Alternative growing methods

You can attempt to cheat the system and go around the germination and bug challenges with carrots altogether by using transplants or growing carrots in a pot. Heck, might as well put carrot transplants in a pot. Some years back I grew a very nice crop of carrots in a pot that was only a little more than a foot deep.

March 2023. Carrots growing in homemade compost in plastic container.
Carrots from above container harvested early on April 24, 2023.

Harvesting

“Show me your carrot so I can take a picture of it.”

“Whatever, Dad. Just let me eat.”

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