I’d challenge you to find anyone who tends an allotment/veg garden who hasn’t grown potatoes before! In fact, I’d say that potatoes have to be one of the staple crops of the Great British allotment, with many growers debating the merits/problems with ‘chitting’ their tubers, how they prepare the ground and how to get the best harvest. Yet when you mention second cropping potatoes and the fact you can plant two crops a year, many gardeners won’t believe it or they will look at you as if you’re talking in a foreign language! Second cropping potatoes are also known as
‘Christmas’ potatoes due to the fact you can harvest your own home-grown ‘new potatoes’ on Christmas Day with a little care and know-how, perfect to brag about to family and friends when you wander into the garden on Christmas Day and come back in with a bowl of beautiful, small potatoes ready for Christmas Day lunch. That said, second cropping potatoes aren’t just for Christmas, they can be harvested from around October-December and only take a few months to grow, normally planted in late June-August – and they’re pretty easy!
CONTAINER GROWING
When it comes to growing second cropping potatoes, location is the key factor to success, with what you grow your plants in being the most important question. With regular spring planting potatoes most people grow them in the ground or raised beds, with the minority growing in potato bags or containers, whereas second cropping potatoes produce a better crop when they can be moved around in containers; this is due to several factors: weather, warmth and disease.
This story is from the September 2020 edition of Kitchen Garden.
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This story is from the September 2020 edition of Kitchen Garden.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 8,500+ magazines and newspapers.
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