potato sprouts are too long?

Discussion in 'Edible Gardening' started by tolennaki, Feb 18, 2014.

  1. tolennaki

    tolennaki Apprentice Gardener

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    Hello from a total beginner! I have decided to grow potatoes this year (among other veggies), which I have never tried before. I bought some potato seeds from Wilkinson's today. These are some maincrop seeds, which look fine, and 1st earlies. The 1st earlies already have sprouts which are a couple of inches long. At the beginning I thought this was a good thing, but when I started going through this forum I found out this is probably not the case :( So my question is: What should I do with these seeds? Do they stand a chance to grow into normal plants? Since they are ready for planting, should I plant them in pots inside the house and then plant them outside in March? Any advice will be appreciated!
     
  2. JWK

    JWK Gardener Staff Member

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    Welcome to the forum :)

    Those long sprouts are a result of being stored in a warm shop with not enough light, so you need to put them where they get lots of natural daylight and is cool (but frost free). They stand a very good chance of growing into good plants, a few long sprouts isn't the end of them, the sprouts are delicate so could be easily knocked off so take care handling them. Get them out of the netting bag as soon as possible.
     
  3. tolennaki

    tolennaki Apprentice Gardener

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    Thank you for the swift reply! I have placed them in my egg boxes on my windowsill, so they should get plenty of sunlight. When should I plant them? How long should I wait?
     
  4. JWK

    JWK Gardener Staff Member

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    It depends where you are, if you put your location in your profile it would help us to advise. A few of us in very sheltered locations can get away with planting in open ground already. For myself I'm going to plant a few in containers in my greenhouse in the next couple of weeks, these get going much faster and I move them outdoors in late April. I plant the rest straight into the soil in mid-March if weather conditions are good.
     
  5. Dave W

    Dave W Total Gardener

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    I planted my 1st earlies in a bag in the polytunnel last week. They too had pale long shoots but I planted them gently to avoid damage and they should be just fine. Did the same last year and ended up with a nice early crop.
     
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    • tolennaki

      tolennaki Apprentice Gardener

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      Sorry about the missing info, I will fill in my profile as soon as I can. I live in London, so it's usually warmer than most parts of the country. I think I will plant them in small bags and keep them indoors an then transfer them outdoors in a few weeks.
       
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      • JWK

        JWK Gardener Staff Member

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        Living in London you'll have warmer conditions than me, so that sounds like a good plan. What sort of bags have you got, I mean are they quite big?
         
      • tolennaki

        tolennaki Apprentice Gardener

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        I thought I would use food bags and make some holes for drainage. Do you think in one month they will get so big that they won't have enough space in there? Please let me know what you think and I'll try to find bigger bags.
         
      • Lolimac

        Lolimac Guest

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        You'll need much bigger bags tolennaki...you'd be better with some old compost bags or strong bags of that size...you can roll the sides down and just put about 6 inches of compost in the bottom place the potatoe in and carefully cover it with a few more inches of compost until they start to grow through,then when they reach about 8 inches roll the sides of the bag up and add more compost leaving the last few leaves showing and keep repeating until you get to the top... ....the bags will need to be strong enough to take the weight when moving to where you want them and will be heavy:dbgrtmb:
         
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        • Dave W

          Dave W Total Gardener

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          We bought a couple of potato grow bags in our local Pound Shop last year and they are perfect for the job. Another type or bag we've used are strong rubble sacks from Tesco, though these are no quite the same capacity.
          The T&M website has useful info about growing potatoes in containers and you can see the size of the 'sacks' which should give you an idea about the size you really need.
          In the past I've just planted one layer and earthed up as they grow, but this year I'm trying two layers (as per the T&M illustrations) and have filled the bag to the top with compost.

          http://www.thompson-morgan.com/how-to-grow-potatoes-in-bags.
           
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          • tolennaki

            tolennaki Apprentice Gardener

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            Thank you all for the advice. Do you think it would be possible for me to plant them in smaller plastic bags indoors and then, when I transfer them outside in March, to remove those with my scissors (carefully, so that the compost stays in its place around the roots) and plant them in proper big bags? It would be easier to have the smaller bags inside the house but I wouldn't do that if you think it's too risky, of course!
             
          • JWK

            JWK Gardener Staff Member

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            I've done something similar in the past tolennaki. I've successfully started them off early in the greenhouse in trays of compost then transferred them to bags/containers when they get bigger. The compost stays on the roots pretty well and the sprouts are a lot tougher once they develop leaves.

            It's worth trying, just make sure you have some drainage holes in the bags and don't seal them up (sorry if that sounds obvious).
             
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            • tolennaki

              tolennaki Apprentice Gardener

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              Hehehe, nothing sounds too obvious for a beginner!
               
            • Mike Graham

              Mike Graham Gardener

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              I know you'll probably skin me for saying this, but I got some seed potatoes last year, and they got sent out really early, I put them somewhere that I thought was cool, but when I got them out the sprouts were about 40cm in length! Because they were still in the net bags, most of the long sprouts came off, and I kept just the shorter ones, and commenced chitting once again in the greenhouse, turned out the potatoes just grew new sprouts, and when it came to harvesting there were mounts of spuds! So I'd say, potatoes are tough cookies, and I wouldn't worry too much about knocking the odd one off.
               
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              • Scrungee

                Scrungee Well known for it

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                I've done that the year Homebase gave away all their remaining seed spuds and onion setts when it was getting too late to plant them. The yield was mediocre, but they were planted out very late (end June/early July?) into un-prepared ground. I just couldn't resist the offer of something that was free (my favourite price).
                 
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