Gardening
Related: About this forumCross pollination question...
My wife was wondering if there would be any cross pollination issues with planting white and orange carrots near each other?
Viva_La_Revolution
(28,791 posts)carrots will cross pollinate, they should be separated by 1/4 mile when growing for seed.
If you're just going to eat them, it doesn't matter.
opiate69
(10,129 posts)So, would the white carrots potentially wind up not being white then?
Viva_La_Revolution
(28,791 posts)carrots are harvested to be eaten the first year. If you want seeds, you leave them in the ground and they flower and seed the second year.
I'm doing a mix this year.. purples, oranges, whites and yellows. I'm hoping it will tempt the grandson who hates all vegetables
opiate69
(10,129 posts)And good luck with the grandson... I think we lucked out. our youngest boy loves carrots (and crab, clams, and a bunch of other stuff kids his age usually wont go near!)
Cracklin Charlie
(12,904 posts)Carries the genetic material for the carrot that that seed will grow into.
If the seed that you plant into the ground is sold as orange carrot; the carrot that grows from that seed will be orange.
Cross pollination affects the next generation, your seed's children, so to speak. If the orange carrot plants that grow from your seed are allowed to flower, and the flowers from your orange carrot are pollinated by pollen from a yellow carrot plant flower, the seeds produced from that union may grow to produce carrots that are orange, or yellow, or something in between.
Your carrot plants can have sex right out in your yard, and you wouldn't even know it.
Edit to add: fresh carrots are yummy!
opiate69
(10,129 posts)Yeah.. I should have thought about that, actually.. makes complete sense.. thanks!
Cracklin Charlie
(12,904 posts)Was complaining about the oak pollen that my area is absolutely plagued with every year in April. (I live in the forest).
I told her that meant that her trees had been having sex right above her white, though tinged with green from the pollen, car. And this fall, after spending a few weeks hoping not to get hit on the head by one falling out of the tree, she will get to pick up, rake, and shovel away all their children (acorns).
opiate69
(10,129 posts)no idea why I never thought of it that way!
NRaleighLiberal
(60,493 posts)Actually, since carrots are biennial, it would take a year just to get seeds.....
opiate69
(10,129 posts)We wouldn't be trying to grow commercially, so if we wound up with a weird kaleidoscope of carrots in a couple years, so be it, as long as we can still eat them.
NRaleighLiberal
(60,493 posts)I plant tomatoes next to each other and save seed - typically find less than 5% crossed even if I save in the summer with bee activity around; if I save seeds very early (pre-bee busy-ness), I get nearly 100% purity.
I spent much of today working with tomato plants and dreaming about the coming summer's harvest!
opiate69
(10,129 posts)Very relaxing, and rewarding, though I pretty much only got into it as far as "plant it, water it, eat it".. really looking forward to expanding our knowledge!