Monday 27 April 2020

Still Time To Plant Potatoes!

This is a collaborative  post

In gardening we are governed by many myths and old wife's tales. Just the other day I was putting in some potatoes and someone said to me that I should have put them in on Good Friday. Now despite the fact that Good Friday moves every year, I can also say that there is no way commercial potato farmers follow these rules - and they get some pretty impressive crops. 


So there is still plenty of time to put in potatoes! 


Potato House contacted me the other day to see if I'd like to share this message and while looking at what they had online the girls fell in love with some of the more colourful varieties of potatoes. They kept laughing about having a blue potatoes in a salad! 

So that was it, we've already got some of our normal potatoes in, it was time to grow some that would make them really smile! 




In the end we got a great selection which included Pink Gypsy, Salad Blue, Heidi Red and Highland Burgundy Red

The main veg garden is filling up fast but one place we've completely neglected the last few months is the front garden. This is because the only time we've gone out that way is to take out the bins or when my wife has gone to work! I've not driven the truck in over five weeks now! 



But I want to make sure the beds are used! Putting something in low maintenance like potatoes is ideal! 

The girls helped me prepare the two beds, adding some well rotted manure to each (potatoes are hungry plants) and breaking the soil up. Unfortunately somehow these beds have got ground elder in so we had to spend some time digging out the roots (but I'm sure we left enough to cause us problems next year). What with all the nettles here and now ground elder it's almost like the Romans didn't like easy gardening (and I know people will tell me to eat them, but there is only so much we can eat of these plants I tell you!!!).

We planted the spuds just over a foot (30cm) apart and about 6 inches deep (15cm) and we'll aim to earth them up a bit when they poke through in a few weeks time. 



There is something really satisfying about growing potatoes. One of the highest calorie crops worth growing on a small scale, my uncle always said that when you'd eat them the day of harvest that "potatoes that fresh have there own butter in 'em!" and it's hard not to agree.

The girls are old hands at planting veg but it was fun to see them genuinely excited about planting something a bit different like this. They're already hoping they'll be able to feed the different coloured potatoes to their friends in the summer after (if) lock down ends! 

Potato House have loads of different varieties on their website ranging from unusual to the more regular staples we're used to. 

They have also put a 10% discount for 1kg nets of Maris Peer, Setanta, Colleen, just use the code EngHome10 at the checkout. 

I've also asked them a range of questions, just because I'm super geeky about how things like seed potatoes are grown, so watch out for that post tomorrow. 


What is your favourite potato variety to grow? Are you still planning to grow some more?


###Although this is a collaborative post everything I've expressed in this post is true to me. Potato house were lovely to deal with, the potatoes came quickly and look to be in perfect condition. You should have seen the girls faces when they saw the colour of the potatoes they'll get to dig up later in the year!### 

10 comments:

  1. Gypsy pink look very much like the Pinto potatoes I was looking for.... off to investigate

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    1. I thought of you with this post! they're lovely people, send them an email and they might be able to help you.

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    2. I will. Trying to grow different things so we dont get lethargic with it. it is so hard to garden here. I feel like I am moaning, but it is still so cold... potatoes will do well

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  2. A couple of years ago, I planted some purple Peruvian potatoes. They are wonderful, but now I have a perennial potato bed. They are so dark in color, I never manage to get every one out at harvest time and they volunteer every year. :)

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    1. Volunteer potatoes are sometimes impossible to get out of a bed. I find it normally happens when there is lots of small ones. I've had some come up this year in beds I planted two years ago with potatoes and I'm sure I removed any that popped up last year!

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  3. My children refused to eat purple potatoes! Pinks were ok, but purple... thats where they drew the line. Few days ago my potato patch was still frozen, so I have no hurry to plant any, not even the boring white and yellow.

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    1. My kids will pretty much eat anything! The boy isn't as brave as the girls but honestly those two girls will try something multiple times before they decide they don't like it, I think they're afraid of missing out. I'm sure they'll eat these as it's what they said they wanted! At least I hope they will!

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  4. I agree about the Good Friday "thing"! Alwasy love seeing your gang get involved. I have still my maincrop to put in but won't be today as FINALLY the rain has come! I planted purple sarpo I think they were the other year and one of my boys flatly refuse to eat them! I've had a right do with rogue spuds in my main bed that for some reason I missed last year but think I have all of them up now. (Did I tell you that already?)

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    1. Volunteer potatoes are a really pain aren't they! It's when you got ot remove them and everything else gets dislodged! Another non eating purple potatoes! Maybe I should record the girls saying they chose them so I won't have any arguments! In this house the main trouble is trying to stop them eating!

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  5. We found a 'lost' bag of seed potatoes one year. So, we planted them on the Fourth of July, and had 'new' potatoes for Thanksgiving Dinner on November 24. What a hoot! Yes, there is still lots of time to plant 'taters.

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