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How to Save Carrot Seeds

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Welcome! this post is part of the Prepared Bloggers’ 30 Ways of Homesteading roundup!  At the bottom of this post you’ll find lots of great links to other ways to become self sufficient through homesteading, so be sure to check them out!

Saving carrot seeds is a two year process.  Like many other root crops including onions and beets, carrots are biennials.  This means the first year they are planted, they do not seed.  They will produce seed in their second year.  In all but the coldest climates, carrots can be overwintered in the ground.  If you live where it regularly freezes through the winter, cover the carrots with a thick layer of mulch or straw bales to protect them from freezing.  Alternately, the carrots can be harvested in the fall and stored in a root cellar or other cool, humid location to be replanted the following spring.  Some suggest storing carrots in bins layered with moist sand or sawdust through the winter.  I kept mine in the ground.

The second spring, the carrots grow green tops again, but this time they have flowers.  One carrot will produce 5-10 flower heads, and each flower produces hundreds of tiny carrot seeds.  Here are some pictures of how the flowers develop:

Early spring when the garden is still young

In full bloom

They get tall and pretty when they’re blooming–This is about early July

Then the flowers die off and leave these little seed buds developing

Leave the seed heads on the plant until the seeds are dry.  It took until mid-August for the first mature seeds to be ready.  The seeds are burred, so they stick to clothes, pets, and anything else that passes by.  I’m sure I’ll have carrots growing everywhere next spring, including the path between the garden and the house!

Seed dispersal in action!

Clip the seed heads from the plants and let them finish drying in a paper sack to contain the seeds.

The burrs on the seeds don’t affect their growing ability, but you can rub them off if you want prettier seeds.

Store them in a cool place to plant next spring!  As a side note, if this is a “survival garden” and you start with a limited number of seeds, plant half the first year and save half to plant the second year so you can have carrots growing while the first year’s carrots are making seeds.

If you have carrots in your garden, try overwintering some and grow your own seed next year.  Happy seed saving!

Want more about saving seeds? Check out my Seed Category for how to save seeds from lots of other garden plants!

The Prepared Bloggers Network is at it again! We’re glad you’ve found us, because the month of April is all about homesteading.

Homesteading is a lifestyle of self-sufficiency. It is characterized by growing your own food, home preservation of foodstuffs, and it may even involve the small scale production of textiles, clothing, and craftwork for household use or sale. Most importantly homesteading is not defined by where someone lives, such as the city or the country, but by the lifestyle choices they make.

The Prepared Bloggers are passionate about what they do and they each have their own way of achieving self-sufficiency. Grab your favorite drink and enjoy reading about the 30 Ways of Homesteading!

Crops on the Homestead

Straw Bale Gardening from PreparednessMama

Crop Rotation for the Backyard Homesteader from Imperfectly Happy

Benefits of Growing Fruit from SchneiderPeeps

Succession Planting: More Food in the Same Space from 104 Homestead

Crops to Grow for Food Storage from Grow A Good Life

Winter Gardening Series from Our Stoney Acres

How To Build a Raised Garden Bed For Under $12 from Frugal Mama and The Sprout

How to Save Carrot Seeds from Food Storage and Survival

Animals on the Homestead

Getting Your Bees Started from Game and Garden

Homesteading How-To: Bees from Tennessee Homestead

How to Get Ready for Chicks from The Homesteading Hippy

Selecting a Goat Breed for Your Homestead from Chickens Are a Gateway Animal

Adding New Poultry and Livestock from Timber Creek Farm

Beekeeping 101: 5 Things To Do Before Your Bees Arrive from Home Ready Home

How to Prepare for Baby Goats from Homestead Lady

How to Prevent and Naturally Treat Mastitis in the Family Milk Cow from North Country Farmer

Tips to Raising Livestock from Melissa K. Norris

Raising Baby Chicks – Top 5 Chicken Supplies from Easy Homestead

Making the Homestead Work for You – Infrastructure

Ways to Homestead in a Deed Restricted Community from Blue Jean Mama

Building a Homestead from the Ground Up from Beyond Off Grid

DIY Rainwater Catchment System from Survival Prepper Joe

Finding Our Homestead Land from Simply Living Simply

I Wish I Was A Real Homesteader by Little Blog on the Homestead

Endless Fencing Projects from Pasture Deficit Disorder

Essential Homesteading Tools: From Kitchen To Field from Trayer Wilderness

Homesteading Legal Issues from The 7 P’s Blog

Why We Love Small Space Homesteading In Suburbia from Lil’ Suburban Homestead

Preserving and Using the Bounty from the Homestead

How to Dehydrate Corn & Frozen Vegetables from Mom With a Prep

How to Make Soap from Blue Yonder Urban Farms

How to Render Pig Fat from Mama Kautz

How to Make Your Own Stew Starter from Homestead Dreamer

Why You Should Grow and Preserve Rhubarb! from Living Life in Rural Iowa

It’s a Matter of Having A Root Cellar…When You Don’t Have One from A Matter of Preparedness

Keep preparing!
Angela

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Source: http://foodstorageandsurvival.com/saving-seeds-carrot/


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