These are "Autumn King", a very fine maincrop variety that has been around for a long time. Mostly, they are nice straight roots, though there are always a few weirdos!
Freshly-dug carrots like these keep for ages in the fridge if they get the chance, and if you have the fridge-space it's very convenient to have a bag of them there ready - saves rushing out to the garden to furtle around in the soil (probably in the dark and the rain) when you realize you need some carrots for a dish you're cooking!
While I was harvesting those carrots, I found this opportunistic little tomato plant nestled in amongst the carrot leaves. It must be from a seed that came in with the home-made compost. I don't expect the fruits will ripen, but you never know...
I filled the space vacated by the carrots with a load of Endives. For a reason I have forgotten, I was a bit late sowing my Endives this year (it was 6th August, a full month later then usual), so the plants are still quite small.
The other day I put a few of these into some of the pots that had formerly held big tomato plants, and covered them with plastic bell-cloches, effectively making each one into a mini-greenhouse.
Endives will survive a light frost, but not a severe one, so this was a sort of insurance policy. I reckoned that if I took as many precautions as possible as early as possible, then we wouldn't get a frost until about Christmas time!
Most of the Endives have gone in where the carrots used to be.
They are a mix of many different varieties, so I have no idea which is which. One or two of them appear to be broad-leaved types, which is odd because I thought they were all curly-leaf types.
I have planted them fairly close to each other, because I don't expect them to get very big, having been sown so late.
I have protected them too, using a couple of my Longrow tunnel cloches.
Let's hope they will have enough time to reach a harvestable size before the cold kills them off!