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Tatties 2017

Discussion in 'Edible Gardening' started by Scrungee, Jan 5, 2017.

  1. JWK

    JWK Gardener Staff Member

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    Hey Zigs you've nicked @Sheal 's avatar
     
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    • Scrungee

      Scrungee Well known for it

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      I'm growing Kondor again this year. I've got them chitting at the moment and any day now will be removing all the shoots except one per tuber as I I'm growing them for giant spuds. They were way ahead of the other entries in our village show, despite getting a very bad attack of scab that got the biggest ones.
       
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      • Webmaster

        Webmaster Webmaster Staff Member

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        Have you tried growing the chits you remove?

        I've seen a few people this year doing this, as spuds grow from the roots that the plant puts out, so in theory, you could get 10+ plants from a single potato.
         
      • Webmaster

        Webmaster Webmaster Staff Member

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        And where have you found is the best supplier ?
         
      • Scrungee

        Scrungee Well known for it

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        I bought mine from here Seed Potatoes, visiting in person. They sell an amazing selection of seed spuds.

        They're £4.80 for 2.5 Kg + shipping (£4 price on website is incorrect). They can ship a single bag by Royal Mail, but more than 1 bag attracts courier charges.

        By this time last year they were sold out, but if they are, or if 10 or so tubers would be enough, I have some spares I could send you, PM if you'd like them @Webmaster

        Yes, they rooted OK, but then grew so slowly that I chucked them out.
         
        Last edited: Feb 18, 2017
      • dalrimple

        dalrimple Gardener

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        no thats a score in golf , it's a type of bird though ,it's the bigest Vulture in the world !
        atb Dal
         
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        • Sheal

          Sheal Total Gardener

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          Thanks for letting me know @JWK . Can't trust that young @Zigs ! :snorky:

          Oi Mr S! Give me back my Oystercatcher please! :biggrin:
           
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          • JWK

            JWK Gardener Staff Member

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            Best method is to slice the seed potato in two or more so you get at least two eyes per slice. You can do this before they start chitting, the cut edges soon heal up. Then the mother tuber is still supplying the chits with energy so they grow away just as quick as untouched tubers. You may lose one or two but you can easily double or treble the number of plants.
             
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            • Scrungee

              Scrungee Well known for it

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              But if growing spuds for a heaviest potato, there's a school of thought that only a single shoot should be allowed to develop from the tuber, and that larger tubers produce larger spuds, so cutting in half would be counter-productive.
               
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              • Linz

                Linz Total Gardener

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                So along with maris peer and rocket, I'm going for cara, kestrel and valor on the plot. Have been told we get major eelworm problems. Been told and read they're quite resistant to it.. :fingers crossed:

                No show spuds here :redface:
                 
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                • "M"

                  "M" Total Gardener

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                  Just found the Duke of York first earlies I bought the other week ( :doh: ); now on a windowsill, in an eggbox and hopefully Chitting :thumbsup:
                   
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                  • Webmaster

                    Webmaster Webmaster Staff Member

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                    Thinking of trying Sarpo Mira this year, anyone had any great results with them?

                    I saw a video recently where a guy had a huge haul growing them in 30 litre pots.

                    Just had a quick search and found the video ... Much easier than digging out of the ground :D

                     
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                    • JWK

                      JWK Gardener Staff Member

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                      I grew Sarpo Mira for the first time last year Webmaster, they outperformed all my other varieties. I'm still digging them up straight out of the ground, getting two or three really big bakers plus a few smaller ones on each root. They taste good and are the best for mash I've ever grown. They are supposed to be Blight resistant too, although I didn't get any blight on any of my potatoes last year.
                       
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                      • Scrungee

                        Scrungee Well known for it

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                        Reducing number of shoots on seed potatoes

                        There was previously some discussion on GC regarding the optimum number of shoots per seed potato, New (to me) chitting advice and some more here Tatties covering reducing to 3 shoots for an improved yield an only one to grow a single giant potato.

                        I can remember being told another reason to remove shoots, apparently some varieties have a tendency to only produce a single shoot from a single eye, but rubbing it off will cause a bunch of shoots to sprout from it and increase the yield. N.B. only rubbing off, not cutting out the eye, as mentioned on first (?) link, rubbed shoots will re-sprout.

                        I've just gouged out all the eyes bar one in my Kondor and Picasso seed spuds that I'm using for 'heaviest potato' class. Although they wont re-grow from those locations, it forces dormant eyes to start sprouting. When their wounds have healed they're planted in trays of MPC so I can see additional shoots requiring removal.
                         
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                        • Scrungee

                          Scrungee Well known for it

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                          I missed a bit Chitting Potatoes | Sprouting Potatoes

                          "Using a potato peeler remove all the eyes in the rose end cluster by scooping approximately one eighth of an inch (3mm) deep, which should eliminate any regrowth. You must make sure that you remove the whole eye to stop any regrowth. Without the rose eyes the tuber's food reserves will be directed to shoulder and side eyes"

                          That fits in with what I've been told about how to grow giant spuds, restricting to a single shoot from a (flat) side (rather than rose end) will produce bigger potatoes.
                           
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                            Last edited: Mar 4, 2017
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