Healthy beets alongside those not faring as well. (Corinne Conlon | For the Juneau Empire)

Healthy beets alongside those not faring as well. (Corinne Conlon | For the Juneau Empire)

Beets and Boron

Beets are a vegetable that I have worked hard to like. I can tolerate them in dishes, but I don’t find a plate of them enticing. My daughter does, which means they have a reluctant spot in my garden.

The seeds are really a dried fruit pod. Inside each one are multiple embryos ready to develop. As they sprout, you’ll get more than one plant. No matter how far apart you sow your seeds, you need to thin them.

Look carefully at your seed package to find the optimum size for the variety you selected. Thin plants to the suggested spacing requirements. Keep the bed well weeded, but use your hands to pull up unwanted plants if you’re within six inches of the root.

In my garden, my beets successfully began, but then failed to develop. They’d come up in nice, neat rows. I’d diligently thin them, yet they never amounted to anything more than skinny, pencil-like roots.

Suzanne Williams said the soil in Southeast is notoriously lacking in the mineral boron. To amend this deficiency, either add a boron additive, found where gardening supplies are sold, or borax, which you can find near the laundry detergent. Add one tablespoon per gallon and mix thoroughly. Then pour this around the beets once a month. She cautions against spilling any directly on the plant.

Some people treat their soil once every couple of years and grow fabulous beets. Too much boron can cause harm, but it’s a bit like Vitamin D. In our location, we rarely, if ever, get enough. You can try one boron treatment or you can follow Suzanne’s lead.

Regular watering is important for all root vegetables. Lack of water stresses the plant and causes it to taste wood-like instead of succulent. Southeast rains demand that our soil has good drainage to handle excess water. This means that when we have periods of little rain, our garden does not retain the moisture plants need. Watering is a must on hot, dry days.

Beets also require potassium. Add a cup of bone meal to every two gallons of soil to increase the amount of potassium and phosphorus where you are growing beets. Nitrogen isn’t important unless you want to harvest the greens.

Hopefully this year you and I will both have prize winning beets. Harvest when they are one and a half inches to two inches in diameter or when they start mounding the surface near their stems. Be sure to cut the stems an inch above the root. If the leaves are kept on the beet, they take up moisture from the root. Beet greens, like their relative Swiss chard, have a strong taste, but can be sautéed or put into soups.

When I told Suzanne Williams my dislike for beets, she had her husband fetch me two jars. One contained a golden beet soup while the other was a red beets with venison broth. And, because the beets were combined with something, they were delicious as is all of Suzanne’s cooking. However, it took me a long time before I was willing to open the jars to taste those beets.


• Corinne Conlon is a freelance writer based out of Juneau. She can be reached at dirtgirlgardening@gmail.com.


Row of beets. (Corinne Conlon | For the Juneau Empire)

Row of beets. (Corinne Conlon | For the Juneau Empire)

More in Neighbors

Orange apricot muffins ready to eat. (Photo by Patty Schied)
Cooking For Pleasure: Orange apricot muffins for breakfast

A few years ago when I had a bag of oranges and… Continue reading

Tari Stage-Harvey is pastor of Shepherd of the Valley Lutheran Church. (Courtesy photo)
Living and Growing: Watching our words for other people

I could be wrong, but the only time Jesus directly talks about… Continue reading

A person walks along the tideline adjacent to the Airport Dike Trail on Thursday. (Laurie Craig / Juneau Empire file photo)
Gimme A Smile: Help me up

I fell on the ice the other day. One minute, I was… Continue reading

Brent Merten is the pastor of Christ Lutheran Church, Juneau. (Courtesy photo)
Living and Growing: Imagine the comfort of Jesus’ promise of heaven

Earlier this month, former president Jimmy Carter died at the age of… Continue reading

(Juneau Empire File)
Community calendar of upcoming events

This is a calendar updated daily of upcoming local events during the… Continue reading

Caesar salad ready to serve. (Photo by Patty Schied)
Cooking For Pleasure: Restaurant-style Caesar salad

When I go to a fine restaurant and Caesar salad is on… Continue reading

(Photo by Gina Del Rosario)
Living and Growing: Free will

Genesis 1: 26 -28 And God said, Let us make man in… Continue reading

Becky Corson is a member of Shepherd Of The Valley Lutheran Church. (Photo provided by Becky Corson)
Living and Growing: ‘Secondhand’ can be a wonderful way to go

These clothing sales are ruining my life. Maybe that’s an overstatement. It’s… Continue reading

A sculpture of Constantine the Great by Philip Jackson in York. (Public domain photo republished under a Creative Commons license)
Living and Growing: Christianity or Churchianity?

Several cruise ship passengers arriving in Juneau this September were greeted on… Continue reading

Szechwan-style fish ready to serve. (Photo by Patty Schied)
Cooking For Pleasure: Fish Szechwan style

Ever since I started writing this column, I have debated whether to… Continue reading

Fred LaPlante is the pastor at Juneau Church of the Nazarene. (Courtesy photo)
Living and Growing: Reflections from Advent

Do you feel pulled in so many directions this Christmas season? I… Continue reading

Members of the Juneau Ski Team offer cookies and other treats to people in the Senate Mall during this year’s Gallery Walk on Friday, Dec. 6. (Mark Sabbatini / Juneau Empire file photo)
Gimme A Smile: Gifts through the ages

Why is it that once the gift-giving holidays are over and the… Continue reading