Beta Vulgaris 'Baby Ball'
Beetroot 'Baby Ball'
Beetroot is a very distinctive vegetable usually globe shaped, dark crimson in colour. The leaves are dark green, sometimes tinged purple, heart shaped and crinkled. 'Baby Ball' quickly produces small, globe-shaped beetroots, about 1" - 1 1/2" diameter - that are an ideal size for pickling whole, and that are sweet and tender. They can be left to mature to larger beetroots, if desired
Contributed by @niching
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Full sun
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Occasional watering
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A little frost hardy: 32F (0°C)
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Free draining and fertile
Common name
Beetroot 'Baby Ball'
Latin name
Beta Vulgaris 'Baby Ball'
type
Vegetable
family
Amaranthaceae
ph
5.5 - 8.5 Acid - Neutral
Plant & bloom calendar
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Best time to plant
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When to harvest
full grown dimensions
Beta Vulgaris 'Baby Ball'
Beetroot is a very distinctive vegetable usually globe shaped, dark crimson in colour. The leaves are dark green, sometimes tinged purple, heart shaped and crinkled. 'Baby Ball' quickly produces small, globe-shaped beetroots, about 1" - 1 1/2" diameter - that are an ideal size for pickling whole, and that are sweet and tender. They can be left to mature to larger beetroots, if desired
Propagation by seed
From Early Spring TO Mid Summer
Beetroot seeds can be sown any time from early Spring to mid Summer. Make a shallow trench in manured soil and either sow the seeds in pairs every 4", and then remove the weakest of the pair when they are about 2" high, or sow more thickly, and, when the plants are the size of golf balls, thin to leave one plant every 4", and use the thinnings in salads. Sow every 4 weeks for a succession of crops. Make an earlier start by sowing in the greenhouse in late Winter, and planting out in early Spring
Planting
From Early Spring TO Mid Spring
Plant out seedlings grown in the greenhouse into well-manured soil, in rows 12" apart, and the plants 4" apart.