Seed Potatoes
These potatoes will take you to the next level of gourmet home grown potatoes. Don't settle for less!
Key points for success
Choose a warm sunny site with free draining soil and add compost.
Use only quality certified seed potatoes.
Water during dry periods.
Plan to plant different varieties throughout the season to keep up a constant supply.
Selecting the site - Potatoes will grow best in a warm sunny position. They do not perform well in the shade or where they have to compete for light and moisture. Shelter from strong winds is also a benefit. The size of the potato garden depends on the size of your family and your requirements. You can grow a potato crop in a stack of old tyres, large buckets or trash bins.
The soil - Potatoes require a free draining soil rich in organic matter (compost). In clay soils, the potato plot should be raised or built up some 15cm above the surrounding soil to ensure good drainage.
“Seed” Potatoes - Potatoes are grown from tubers known as ‘seed potatoes’. Potato virus diseases can severely reduce yield if the seed potato is infected. It is important to buy quality ‘seed potatoes’ that are certified free of virus diseases.
There are numerous varieties with distinct differences in shape, colour, size, yield, time to maturity, taste, and suitability for mashing, boiling, baking or chipping.
Varieties:
Christmas potatoes are always a must have:
Cliff's Kidney - a white fleshed potato ideal for salads and boiling.
Cliff's Kidney - a yellow fleshed potato which is great for boiling and mashing and has a distinctive flarour.
Other early varieties are Rocket; Anuschka; and Swift.
Main crop varieties cover most, which have an intermediate growing period, maturing in 100 - 120 days. These varieties are best planted in Sept - October.
Good main crop varieties include:
Red Rascal, Desiree, (red skinned varieties) which are good all purpose varieties. Also Agria; Heather; Ilam Hardy; Maris Anchor; Nadine and Jelly.
Late varieties tend to be the slower to maturity, high yielding, and good for storage varieties.
Late crop varieties include:
Rua - an older type which produces high yields of large oval flat tubers. A good keeper.
Moonlight – a very high yielding potato that is great for mashing, boiling, and chips.
Sprouting
Sprouting - It is a good idea to ensure ‘seed potatoes’ have a good strong growing shoot emerging from the tuber prior to planting. Buy your ‘seed potatoes’ a few weeks in advance of planting time, and place them in a tray positioned in a warm light position. This will encourage sprouting.
Planting
Potatoes are tubers which form off the underground stem of the plant. (They are stem tubers not root tubers) . Hence to produce a good crop it is necessary to ensure there is a significant amount of stem covered with soil.
The ‘seed potatoes’ are planted in a hole about 100mm deep, about 400 - 500mm apart in rows about 800mm apart.
Mounding Up - When the potatoes have emerged to 200mm high, mound up the soil almost covering the emerged tops. When they have grown another 200 - 300mm, repeat the process. This produces a large mounded row in which the new potato tubers will form and grow.
Watering - Potatoes tolerate reasonably dry conditions, but in very dry weather they may require regular watering.
Feeding - Prior to planting, apply a dressing of lime. Work this into the soil and leave for a week.
Pests and Diseases - The major disease of potatoes is late blight. Despite its name, it often occurs early in the season or late. It usually attacks in wet cool conditions. Once infested it will spread rapidly. Initially black or brown blotches appear on the leaves, which spread to total defoliation. Control by spraying at the very first sign of black spots with Yates Fungus Fighter or Growsafe Freeflo Copper Spray thoroughly including the undersides of leaves.
A major newly arrived pest of potatoes is the Potato psylid. The limpet like insect attaches itself to the undersides of leaves. As it sucks the sap it also injects a toxin into the plant which inhibits the formation and sizing of the new potato tubers. Once this pest is present in your area, regular preventative spraying with Yates Mavrik is required from December - April. Early planted crops harvested before mid-January are much less likely to be attacked. Alternatively, cover your whole crop with bug netting to prevent the potato psylid from gaining access to your crop!