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Intermediate Turnip Growing: Varieties, Succession & Season Extension
VegetablesFortgeschritten

Intermediate Turnip Growing: Varieties, Succession & Season Extension

Master turnip production with comprehensive variety selection, succession planting, integrated pest management, and season extension for continuous harvests.

17 Min. Lesezeit
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SG

Sarah Green

Horticulturist and garden expert with 15+ years of experience growing vegetables, herbs, and houseplants. Certified Master Gardener.

Intermediate Turnip Growing: Varieties, Succession & Season Extension

Ready to elevate your turnip growing? This intermediate guide explores the full diversity of turnip varieties, teaches succession planting for continuous harvest, and reveals techniques for managing common challenges. Whether you're growing for farmers markets or a well-stocked root cellar, these techniques will enhance your turnip production.

Comprehensive Variety Selection

Understanding Turnip Categories

Turnips are classified by several characteristics:

By Root Color:

  • White (most common): Purple Top, Hakurei
  • Purple/White bicolor: Purple Top White Globe
  • Yellow/Golden: Golden Ball, Petrowski
  • Red: Scarlet Queen, Red Round
  • Pink: Pink Beauty

By Primary Use:

  • Salad/raw eating (Hakurei types)
  • Cooking (standard types)
  • Storage (large, dense types)
  • Greens (Seven Top, All Top)
  • Forage/Cover crop (large leafy types)

Detailed Variety Guide

Japanese/Salad Turnips (30-45 days):

VarietyDaysSizeFeatures
Hakurei382"Sweet, crisp, eat raw
Tokyo Cross352-6"Hybrid, all-white, smooth
Tokyo Market352"Tender, mild
Oasis422-3"Holds well, sweet
Market Express382-3"Very fast

Standard/Cooking Turnips (45-60 days):

VarietyDaysSizeFeatures
Purple Top White Globe553-4"Classic, reliable
Purple Top Milan453-4"Flattened, early
White Egg452-3"Egg-shaped, sweet
Scarlet Queen452-3"Red skin, white flesh
Golden Ball553-4"Yellow, mild, stores well

Storage/Winter Turnips (55-70 days):

VarietyDaysSizeFeatures
Gilfeather854-6"Vermont heirloom, excellent keeper
Amber Globe704-5"Yellow, very hardy
Petrowski503"Yellow, sweet, stores 6 months

Greens Varieties:

VarietyDaysFeatures
Seven Top40Greens only, small roots
All Top45Virus-resistant, aphid tolerant
Topper35Quick greens production
Shogoin30Japanese, tender greens

Variety Selection Strategy

For Continuous Fresh Harvest:

  • Early: Hakurei, Tokyo Cross (30-40 days)
  • Mid: Purple Top Milan (45 days)
  • Late: Purple Top White Globe (55 days)
  • Succession plant every 2-3 weeks

For Storage:

  • Golden Ball, Gilfeather, Amber Globe
  • Plant in late summer for fall harvest
  • Allow slight frost exposure to sweeten

For Market Sales:

  • Hakurei (premium salad turnips)
  • Purple Top White Globe (recognizable classic)
  • Bunched with greens (higher perceived value)

Succession Planting

Planning Your Harvest Calendar

Spring Succession (Zones 5-7):

Planting DateVariety TypeHarvest Window
March 15Hakurei, early typesMay 1-15
April 1Standard typesMay 15-June 1
April 15Standard typesJune 1-15
Summer gap (too hot)

Fall Succession (Zones 5-7):

Planting DateVariety TypeHarvest Window
July 15Standard typesSept 1-15
August 1Standard, storageSept 15-Oct 15
August 15Standard, storageOct 1-Nov 1
September 1Storage typesOct 15-winter storage

Calculating Quantities

For Family of 4:

  • Weekly consumption: 2-4 lbs
  • Growing time: ~50 days average
  • Recommendation: Plant 10-15 row feet every 2-3 weeks

For Farmers Market:

  • Track customer demand
  • Bundle with greens for higher value
  • Hakurei types command premium prices

Soil and Nutrient Management

Ideal Soil Conditions

Soil Test Targets:

ParameterOptimal RangeAdjustment
pH6.0-6.8Lime if low
Organic Matter3-5%Add compost
NitrogenLow-moderateDon't over-apply
Phosphorus30-50 ppmBone meal if low
Potassium150-200 ppmGreensand if low

Fertilization Program

Pre-Plant:

  • Incorporate 2-3 inches of aged compost
  • Apply low-nitrogen fertilizer (5-10-10) at 2 lbs/100 sq ft
  • Avoid fresh manure (causes forked roots)

Growing Season:

TimingApplicationRate
At thinningSide-dress 5-10-101 tbsp/row foot
3 weeks later (if needed)Fish emulsion2 tbsp/gallon

Note: Over-fertilization (especially nitrogen) produces all tops and small roots.

Cover Cropping Integration

Turnips themselves make excellent cover crops:

  • Planted after main crop harvest
  • Deep taproot breaks up compaction
  • Killed by hard freeze, adds organic matter
  • Forage varieties for livestock grazing

Integrated Pest Management

Pest Identification and Control

Flea Beetles: Most common turnip pest.

Control MethodTimingEffectiveness
Row coversAt plantingExcellent
Kaolin clayPre-emergenceGood
Trap crops (radish)Early springModerate
SpinosadActive infestationGood

Root Maggots (Delia spp.):

Life StageDescriptionLocation
AdultSmall gray flyLays eggs at plant base
LarvaWhite maggotTunnels in roots
PupaBrownIn soil

Prevention:

  • Row covers (most effective)
  • Crop rotation (don't follow alliums or brassicas)
  • Late planting (miss spring flight)
  • Paper collars around stems

Aphids (Turnip Aphid, Lipaphis erysimi): Vector for turnip mosaic virus.

ControlMethod
PreventionReflective mulch, row covers
PhysicalStrong water spray
BiologicalLadybugs, lacewings
Organic sprayInsecticidal soap, neem

Disease Prevention

Clubroot (Plasmodiophora brassicae): Devastating soil-borne disease.

Prevention StrategyImplementation
pH managementRaise to 7.0-7.2
Rotation7+ years away from brassicas
Clean transplantsUse certified disease-free
DrainageImprove if waterlogged

Black Rot (Xanthomonas campestris):

PreventionAction
Seed treatmentHot water (122°F, 25 min)
SanitationRemove infected plants
Rotation2-3 year minimum
IrrigationAvoid overhead watering

Turnip Mosaic Virus:

PreventionAction
Aphid controlPrimary vector management
Resistant varietiesAll Top, Topper
Remove infected plantsDestroy, don't compost
Weed controlRemove wild brassica hosts

Season Extension Techniques

Row Cover Systems

Light Row Cover (0.5 oz):

  • Pest exclusion
  • 2-3°F frost protection
  • Good for spring/fall

Heavy Row Cover (1.5 oz):

  • 6-8°F frost protection
  • Extends fall harvest 4-6 weeks
  • Can overwinter in mild climates

Cold Frame Production

Setup:

  • South-facing orientation
  • Clear lid (glass or polycarbonate)
  • 18" back, 12" front for drainage

Management:

  • Plant storage varieties in August
  • Move to cold frame as weather cools
  • Ventilate on sunny days above 40°F
  • Harvest as needed through winter

In-Ground Storage

Heavy Mulch Method:

  1. Leave turnips in ground after maturity
  2. Apply 8-12 inches of straw after first hard frost
  3. Mark rows for location
  4. Harvest by pulling back mulch
  5. Works in zones 5-7 (colder may freeze)

Root Cellar Storage

Optimal Conditions:

ParameterSpecification
Temperature32-40°F (0-4°C)
Humidity90-95%
Duration3-5 months
PreparationRemove greens, don't wash

Harvesting Optimization

Harvest Timing

TypeSize at HarvestQuality Indicator
Baby/Salad1-2" diameterSmooth, firm
Standard2-4" diameterTops still vigorous
Storage3-5" diameterAfter light frost
Greens4-8" leavesBefore yellowing

Post-Harvest Handling

For Fresh Market:

  1. Harvest in morning (highest turgor)
  2. Remove damaged outer leaves
  3. Wash gently if selling bunched
  4. Cool immediately (hydrocooling or shade)
  5. Bundle greens with roots for premium price

For Storage:

  1. Harvest after light frost (sweetens)
  2. Leave 1" stem stub (prevents rot entry)
  3. Cure at 50°F for 2-3 days
  4. Store unwashed in cool, humid conditions

Troubleshooting Intermediate Issues

Problem: Roots splitting

  • Cause: Irregular watering, especially heavy rain after drought
  • Solution: Consistent irrigation, mulch

Problem: Hollow/pithy centers

  • Cause: Over-mature, heat stress, or boron deficiency
  • Solution: Harvest earlier, provide shade, soil test for boron

Problem: Strong, peppery flavor

  • Cause: Heat stress, water stress, or varietal characteristic
  • Solution: Grow in cool weather, consistent moisture, try milder varieties

Problem: Greens turning yellow

  • Cause: Nitrogen deficiency, water stress, or disease
  • Solution: Side-dress with nitrogen, consistent moisture, check for disease

Next Steps: Advancing Your Skills

Ready for more advanced techniques? Consider:

  1. Commercial production for farmers markets
  2. Cover cropping with turnips
  3. Seed saving (biennial process)
  4. Forage turnip production for livestock

With these intermediate techniques, you'll achieve consistent, high-quality turnip harvests from spring through winter storage.

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