Originally posted by Duronal
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Duronal's Potatoes from Seed Experiment '08 and into '09
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My Majesty made for him a garden anew in order
to present to him vegetables and all beautiful flowers.- Offerings of Thutmose III to Amon-Ra (1500 BCE)
Diversify & prosper
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They weren't exact snadger. I had some which resembled king edwards in their red appearence but the others were just like a standard white potato. I guess they don't self seed because they simply aren't as bomb proof as tomato seeds. Maybe they rot easier...
Two Sheds - if they're about a young cherry tomato size i'd nip them off and leave them on a window sill inside to ripen. At least you should get some seed this way!
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Maybe they do self seed in the garden Snadger? I know there are always loads of the little blighters coming up in my plot and I always try to get them all out the previous year. Some are undoubtedly from ones I missed - but all of them? Maybe there are a few seeded in there but we never know.Whoever plants a garden believes in the future.
www.vegheaven.blogspot.com Updated March 9th - Spring
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Originally posted by SarzWix View PostIf my potato plants got a touch of blight, d'you think I should discard the seed pods? I did pick a couple before the blight struck, so they should be okay, I think.My Majesty made for him a garden anew in order
to present to him vegetables and all beautiful flowers.- Offerings of Thutmose III to Amon-Ra (1500 BCE)
Diversify & prosper
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My Vivaldis have been in flower for around 2 weeks and every last bloom has been blown off, rained off or hailed off!
One remaining set of blooms survived and a few days ago I took this last opportunity to use a fallen flower to pollinate what was left. It looks as though at least one has set and is swelling nicely - there's hope then for the other 3 blooms! I just hope tomorrow's bad weather doesn't ruin my attempt - I'll be gutted if the set fruit drops now!
Judging from Duronal's pics of seeds being taken from the fruit - I reckon the Salad Blues I distributed earlier this year should be ready. I popped open one which looked dodgy as though the skin was parting company from the main body of the fruit. The insides look OK, if a touch gloopy, and the seeds are looking to be 'browning' a little. So I'm going to open up half of what I have and see how they go tomorrow.
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Originally posted by Snadger View PostAs blight is a fungal disease it shouldn't affect the seeds? I would just give the tattie apples a soak in a fungiscide of some description........I used Armillatox last year to save my broad beans from fungal attack!
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In the articles I've read about true potato seed, the idea is that this will be great for developing countries precisely because the seeds will not be infected by blight even if the plant was. No personal knowledge, just repeating something I read on the internet...Warning: I have a dangerous tendency to act like I know what I'm talking about.
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Originally posted by daylily View PostDepengs, what fungus, some go down the seed. Anyhow, I'm interested in this for the biological diversity of open pollinated stuff, unreliant on Mon*****and the likes and giving possibly more reliable gen pool.Potato Breeding Overview
As this is the first saving and sowing of our own seed, the new potato varieties that are grown could be weeded out by the individual to give desirable qualitities to suit their personal needs!
Interesting article btw!My Majesty made for him a garden anew in order
to present to him vegetables and all beautiful flowers.- Offerings of Thutmose III to Amon-Ra (1500 BCE)
Diversify & prosper
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What an enviable situation you are in Snadger! Me on the other hand...hardly a year without blight . So I thought, there wasn't much to lose and I should give it a good go.
Demeter, I think you are right about this particular pathogen, I'm saying there are fungi that invade the seed, like Phytophthora capsici, for example. But, as Snadger says, I'd like to save from healthy, strong plants.
Unfortunately, Phythophtora strains seem to be worse with tomatoes here, had some years when only the tomatoes were diseased and not a single potato was. And that includes so called 'resistant' ones, like Legend.
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Originally posted by daylily View PostUnfortunately, Phythophtora strains seem to be worse with tomatoes here, had some years when only the tomatoes were diseased and not a single potato was. And that includes so called 'resistant' ones, like Legend.
My spuds were unaffected (all the foliage died back last month from old age, so missed any blight that might have got them)All gardeners know better than other gardeners." -- Chinese Proverb.
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