Potatoes
Posted: Thu May 04, 2006 7:01 pm
I'm surprised no one has mentioned no dig for new potatoes. I started doing this 8 or 9 years ago. The idea comes from HDRA Rytons no dig garden.
Put an inch or so of compost/manure 3' wide and as long as you need. Plant potatoes 12" apart each way. Scratch through the compost so the spud sits on the soil. Cover with 4" of straw. When the greenery comes through put another 4" of straw on, working it round the haulms. By the start of May you should be able to get grass clippings. Cover the straw with 2" of the clippings to exclude the light.
The beauty of this method is you can get those scrumy new spuds 2 or 3 weeks earlier. those layers of straw and grass pack down to about a 6" mat.
For harvesting, go along the row gently lifting the straw, and the spuds are sitting on the top. Just take the sizable spud from each plant until you have enough for dinner, leaving the plant undamaged to grow on.
A few points. I get my straw in the Autumn, open the bails and let the winter rain wash it through, incase of herbicides.
Sometimes you'll find a big spud sitting right under the plant. So if it looks like a plant has only little spuds, have a grope under it.
When the spuds are finished the soil is perfect for your purple sprouting, brussels or leeks.
I'm shure there'll be questions, feel free to ask.
Peter
Put an inch or so of compost/manure 3' wide and as long as you need. Plant potatoes 12" apart each way. Scratch through the compost so the spud sits on the soil. Cover with 4" of straw. When the greenery comes through put another 4" of straw on, working it round the haulms. By the start of May you should be able to get grass clippings. Cover the straw with 2" of the clippings to exclude the light.
The beauty of this method is you can get those scrumy new spuds 2 or 3 weeks earlier. those layers of straw and grass pack down to about a 6" mat.
For harvesting, go along the row gently lifting the straw, and the spuds are sitting on the top. Just take the sizable spud from each plant until you have enough for dinner, leaving the plant undamaged to grow on.
A few points. I get my straw in the Autumn, open the bails and let the winter rain wash it through, incase of herbicides.
Sometimes you'll find a big spud sitting right under the plant. So if it looks like a plant has only little spuds, have a grope under it.
When the spuds are finished the soil is perfect for your purple sprouting, brussels or leeks.
I'm shure there'll be questions, feel free to ask.
Peter