-
August 16th, 2021, 10:43 AM
#1
Any Gardening Experts re Spuds?
I was a little lax this summer when it came to fertilizing my potatoes. I usually add a spoon of Miracle Grow to the watering can once a week but didn't do it this season. The two hills that I picked for a feed had mostly small sized potatoes. Now that the tops have turned yellow and stopped growing, is it too late to fertilize in the hopes of seeing my spuds get any larger?
-
August 16th, 2021 10:43 AM
# ADS
-
August 16th, 2021, 11:09 AM
#2
The plant turns yellow at the end of the growing season. I’d say the spuds are done !!
“If you’re not a Liberal by twenty, you have no heart. If you’re not a Conservative by forty, you have no brain.”
-Winston Churchill
-
August 16th, 2021, 11:44 AM
#3
I would be scared if you fertilize now you promote disease scab or rot
Tubers will size up some
-
August 16th, 2021, 03:32 PM
#4
I have a lot of potatoes in the ground right now - the tops are still green - the one thing though there are a lot of weeds growing along side them - I couldn't do much weeding in the garden over the past several weeks because I had cataract surgery and could't bend over for a long time - because of all the appointments I had and the restrictions after surgery I lost a month of working in the garden - I should be back to normal by the end of August - at that point I gotta get busy building up my firewood pile - there is a lot of good information on growing potatoes on the internet - but yes I agree with the others - too late to do anything with them this year -
-
August 17th, 2021, 09:21 AM
#5
As above , be a waste of fertilizer at this point. Go dig up a plant and see what get ? I planted two rows approx. 100 feet long , a mix of Reds, Goldfingers and Russets but unfortunately the slope of my garden allowed all the rain I had here flooded out about 20 feet of them. Some I dug up had white spots ( lenticels) on them caused by too much water but are totally safe to eat they just don't store as well.
Good Luck & Good Hunting !
-
August 17th, 2021, 10:05 AM
#6
Has too much time on their hands
I have 7 X 33ft rows and all my tops and most stems are dead. I use dehydrated sheep manure for fertilizer and did 2 applications one in June and the other in July. 2 weeks ago I dug up 2 plants (Russets) that had all leaf dead and the skins were very thin, and good sized potatoes hardball size. Since this is first large ploy I have grown, I have been following my MIL advice the whole time. My goal is to grow enough to store all winter. She told me to dig some up 2 weeks ago. She also has advised me to keep digging up a plant every 2 weeks to check skin thickness (better for storage) and if there is pest problems, leave them in the ground until fall or as late as possible. I don't think the will grow any bigger, but the ground is better storage conditions then my basement (at least it makes sense).
So I will be digging up another batch tonight to check progress of skins.
She also explained the difference between a "new" potatoe and storage potato skins
Mark Snow, Leader Of The, Ontario Libertarian Party
-
August 17th, 2021, 11:08 AM
#7
You're going to have a whack of potatoes Mark..feeding the village ? HaHa..
Have you been battling Potatoe Bugs this year, used to be bad here. ?
We only did potatoes one year. Too much a PIA. The storage requirement (cool root cellar) did extend the lifespan of some, but still had a lot of waste after the winter. Picking up a bag of fresh ones at the grocery store for $3 was economically the better route for us.
Leaving them in the ground till the fall won't hurt unless you have wet soil and they rot.
Last edited by MikePal; August 17th, 2021 at 11:16 AM.
-
August 17th, 2021, 12:36 PM
#8

Originally Posted by
MikePal
You're going to have a whack of potatoes Mark..feeding the village ? HaHa..
Have you been battling Potatoe Bugs this year, used to be bad here. ?
We only did potatoes one year. Too much a PIA. The storage requirement (cool root cellar) did extend the lifespan of some, but still had a lot of waste after the winter. Picking up a bag of fresh ones at the grocery store for $3 was economically the better route for us.
Leaving them in the ground till the fall won't hurt unless you have wet soil and they rot.
The $3 bag of potatoes I picked up at last week at the grocery store cost me 6.99.
Planning on growing some next summer.
I'm really not buying into the 5% inflation BS.
-
August 17th, 2021, 01:02 PM
#9

Originally Posted by
werner.reiche
The $3 bag of potatoes I picked up at last week at the grocery store cost me 6.99.
Planning on growing some next summer.
I'm really not buying into the 5% inflation BS.
yea that be true....the prices have sure gone up in the past few years. Now I only buy them individually by the lb...4-5 at a time for a meal I'm making. A whole bag tends to go bad before I use the.
-
August 17th, 2021, 03:26 PM
#10
Here is why you want to grow your own potatoes - years ago I was in a barber shop waiting for a hair cut - the guy in the chair was a potato farmer - we got talking about raising potatoes and the bugs that attack them - he tells us he uses systemic type sprays to kill the bugs - in case you don't know systemic type sprays actually get into the plant structure and kills any bugs that eat the plant - we told him that the poison got into the plant and the potatoes - he shrugged his shoulders and said that this type of spray was the best that he ever used - after he left the barber and I talked about how we eat stuff that we have no idea what chemicals are in our food
I live in the country - my place is surrounded by fields - the farmers generally grow either corn, soybeans, potatoes or wheat - when they plant potatoes I watch how much they spray - first before they plant the potatoes to kill all the weeds - then a couple times during the growing season - then at the end to kill all the foliage so that it all dies at the same time - then when the potatoes go to the processing plant they are spray again to keep them from sprouting - when you sit down to have a big dish of mashed potatoes your also eating a pile of chemicals