Growing Beet in Zone 9a
A complete, zone-9a timeline for Beet — when to start, transplant, and harvest, tuned to this zone's typical frost dates (Houston, Phoenix, Orlando).
Your planting timeline
- Direct sowonce soil warms, around February 25
- Harvestabout 50–70 days from transplant
Best varieties for zone 9a
Grow beets as a cool-season fall-through-spring crop, picking heat-tolerant Bull's Blood and Detroit types that resist bolting and stay tender.
Growing notes
Beets need steady, even moisture — about 1 inch of water per week — to grow tender roots without cracking. The most critical stretch is germination, when the seedbed must stay consistently damp for the one to two weeks it takes the seed clusters to sprout; if the surface crusts and dries, emergence is patchy. Once seedlings are up, water deeply and regularly rather than in light sprinkles, encouraging roots to swell smoothly. Inconsistent watering — long dry spells broken by a heavy soak — makes roots crack, split, or develop tough, woody zones and white rings. A light mulch between rows steadies soil moisture and buffers heat. Ease off only slightly as roots approach harvest size.
Recommended supplies
- A seed-starting kit
- A raised garden bed kit
- A sturdy hand trowel
- Frost cloth for cold snaps
- A long-spout watering can
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