Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#1
|
|||
|
|||
Spudsa advice
Hi - this is my first year of growing stuff. Pla\nted some Cara and Desiree potatoes in April. Have just lifted one plant of each and they have given what seems to me to be a good yield. Good looking healthy grub. Not sure though if I sould now lift them all and store, or how long I can leave them in the ground and lift at intervals. Advice welcome. PS - also advice on storage welcome! -- |
#2
|
|||
|
|||
Spudsa advice
"JIP" wrote
Hi - this is my first year of growing stuff. Planted some Cara and Desiree potatoes in April. Have just lifted one plant of each and they have given what seems to me to be a good yield. Good looking healthy grub. Not sure though if I sould now lift them all and store, or how long I can leave them in the ground and lift at intervals. Advice welcome. PS - also advice on storage welcome! Both Cara and Desiree are Maincrop potatoes so usually stay growing until sometime in September. Is the foliage still looking healthy, if so only dig up you need to as they will continue to get bigger and better over the next month at which point the foliage will stat to die off, go brown and then you can dig them all up and store. To store they need a dark cool but frost free place. Use paper potato sacks if possible although if the store room is totally light free then normal sacks can be used. Any light would turn the potatoes green in normal hessian sacks. Paper potato sacks can be obtained from a Farmers Shop although they may try to sell you 500! :-) -- Regards. Bob Hobden. Posted to this Newsgroup from the W of London, UK |
#3
|
|||
|
|||
Spudsa advice
The foliage is beginnig to yellow, but still not too bad. So on what
youn say I'll just pick as the days go on. Many thanks for the reply. -- |
#4
|
|||
|
|||
Spudsa advice
On 15/08/2012 19:31, JIP wrote:
The foliage is beginnig to yellow, but still not too bad. So on what youn say I'll just pick as the days go on. Many thanks for the reply. You don't say how many plants you have, or how long a row |
#5
|
|||
|
|||
Spudsa advice
Paper potato sacks can be obtained from a Farmers Shop although they may
try to sell you 500! :-) Alternatively, your local chippy will probably give you a few as you want for free. Steve |
#6
|
|||
|
|||
Spudsa advice
David Hill wrote:
On 15/08/2012 19:31, JIP wrote: The foliage is beginnig to yellow, but still not too bad. So on what youn say I'll just pick as the days go on. Many thanks for the reply. You don't say how many plants you have, or how long a row Only about 6 plants of each are left. This was/is my first year of growing anything, so mainly experimenting. -- |
#7
|
|||
|
|||
Spudsa advice
On 16/08/2012 09:52, JIP wrote:
David Hill wrote: On 15/08/2012 19:31, JIP wrote: The foliage is beginnig to yellow, but still not too bad. So on what youn say I'll just pick as the days go on. Many thanks for the reply. You don't say how many plants you have, or how long a row Only about 6 plants of each are left. This was/is my first year of growing anything, so mainly experimenting. Then you don't really have to worry about getting sacks etc for storage. If the leaves are going yellow then you could just cut the tops down and leave the spuds in the ground till you need them. The only drawback could be slugs going for them in the ground, some people have problems with them others have no problems. David @ the sunny end of Swansea Bay |
Reply |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|