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You are here: Home / Gardening / 6 Great Tips for Growing Beets

6 Great Tips for Growing Beets

July 21, 2016 by Ann 10 Comments

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6 Great Tips for Growing Beets- Do you enjoy eating beets? You can grow big, healthy beets in your garden with these 6 important tips.

While beets don’t look like much on the outside, on the inside they’re a vibrant color. Usually they’re red, but brilliant golden and bright white beets also exist! Whatever variety you plan to grow, homegrown beets can make a delicious addition to recipes or can be made into homemade dehydrated beet chips! You’ll be able to grow your best beet crop ever after reading these 6 Great Tips for Growing Beets.

6 Great Tips for Growing Beets

1. Have the right soil. Beets are very particular about the PH of the soil they’re planted in. There’s a very short range of pH that they thrive in- 6.5-7. They like this pH best because in this range, phosphorus is easily available to them. To make sure you grow great beets, ensure they’re in soil with the appropriate pH and that there’s already enough phosphorous in their soil. If necessary, you can add phosphorous to the soil via a fertilizer.

2. Provide good space. To ensure your beet crop does well, give each plant enough space. When you sow the seeds, plant them at a depth of 1/2 – 1 inch deep. Each row of beets should be 1 to 1 1/2 feet apart. If you’re planning to harvest your beets when they’re younger and smaller, you can go with the smaller spacing. If you’ve already planted your beets and believe you may have them too close, don’t worry. They’ll need thinning regardless of their original planting location. You can fix that problem then.

3. Thin your plants. Just like with carrots, if you hope to grow great beets you’ll need to thin them. Most beet seeds are multigerm, meaning that several plants can grow from a single seed. As a result, you’ll need to thin your beets to prevent them from crowding each other. When your beet seedlings are about 3 inches tall, it’s time to thin. When you’re finished pulling out the extra seedlings, each seedling should be about 3 inches apart. If you wanted to, you could transplant the thinned extra seedlings and grow them somewhere else.

4. Water your beets often. Beets need a decent amount of water. Without it, you’ll find that your beets will be tough and flavorless. They could also grow short. In order to keep their soil appropriately moist, try not to ever let them get dried out. To make this easier, plant your beets in soil that has compost in it. Mulch can also help the soil retain water longer.

5. Watch out for weeds. Beets don’t do well with weeds whether they’re young or mature plants. Young beet seedlings can be choked out by weeds, so make sure to weed them frequently. But be careful how you do it, as you don’t want to damage the young beets’ roots. When beets are older you won’t have to be as careful, but weeding is just as important. If you don’t do a good enough job weeding your beets, they may come out tough due to having to compete with the weeds for nutrients.

6. Watch the weather. How your beets turn out will depend largely on the weather. To grow great beets, you should plant them at a time so that when they mature the weather will be cool, but sunny. If the weather is too hot they’ll develop less sugar and be lighter in color. However, if the weather is too cold and the plants have already grown leaves, then they may develop flower stalks too early. So planting and growing your beets at the right time of year is key.

What would you do with your homegrown beets?

More Gardening Tips:

Tips for Growing Beets in Your Garden

7 Gardening Tips to Produce Larger Harvests

How to Pick the Best Plants for Your Region

10 Tips for Growing Vegetables

Thanks Savanna for sharing your gardening tips!

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Comments

  1. Zelda says

    June 7, 2023 at 5:59 pm

    Can you grow beets in a container?

    Reply
    • Mark Feinman says

      September 20, 2023 at 9:11 am

      I have been growing all my beets in Pots and they they grow large and taste like sugar.

      Reply
      • brent says

        April 18, 2025 at 9:44 pm

        i have been trying to grow beets for 7 yrs but can’t get them to sprout

        Reply
  2. Patti says

    August 23, 2018 at 7:29 am

    What temperatures do they like best? I live in South Texas and average temperature here in the Summer is about 96 degrees. If I plant the beets in late September the harvest would be early December.

    Reply
    • Mark Feinman says

      September 20, 2023 at 9:14 am

      I live in SoCal San Diego and I grow my Beets all year round..

      Reply
  3. Jodie says

    April 26, 2017 at 7:07 pm

    My beets say to plant in May and it takes 70 days to harvest. That would be mid August in FLORIDA? Will they be less flavorful?

    Reply
    • Alea Milham says

      April 27, 2017 at 12:12 am

      I would plant your beets immediately. Don’t wait to plant them until May in Florida! You can also plant beets in the fall and harvest them in the winter.

      Reply
    • Elizabeth says

      April 22, 2020 at 3:06 pm

      What is most important is the Plant Zone that you are in. I am in zone 7A, I direct sowed beets in April. No matter what seed package says.

      Reply
  4. trudy risley says

    September 3, 2016 at 5:51 am

    My garden has been overcome with weeds, can I moved them off and the beets still grow?

    Reply
    • Alea Milham says

      September 3, 2016 at 2:17 pm

      Yes.

      Reply

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Welcome. I'm Alea!

On Premeditated Leftovers I share simple recipes made with whole foods, practical shopping tips, time saving techniques, and meal planning strategies. I also share tips for minimizing food waste, so more of the food that is purchased ends up on the table.

While volunteering as a budget counselor, I realized that food is the element of most people’s budgets where they have the greatest control. I set out to develop low-cost recipes from scratch to prove it’s possible to create delicious meals on a limited budget. Eating well while spending less is about more than just creating recipes using inexpensive ingredients; it’s about creatively combining ingredients so you don’t feel deprived and are inspired to stick to your budget.

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