Greetings All,
I have been lurking these forums for a while now, and having picked up a fair few useful tips I thought it wise to register and elicit some much needed advice about an issue I'm having with my container grown potatoes.
First a little background. This is my second year growing potatoes in containers (potato bags specifically) and this year I'm growing five varieties. Two varieties (Purple Majesty and Lady Balfour) in re-purposed garden compost bags, and three varieties (Charlotte, Mayan Gold and Vivaldi) in bonafide, store bought potato bags. This year I'm growing my potatoes in a mixture of loam, Pro-Grow™ soil improver, compost and Hertfordshire clay (we've renovating part of the garden and had a lot of this slight silty clay left over. Since I'd heard that potatoes are good at breaking down clay, I thought I'd mix some in). Last year I used a mixture of loam, compost, coarse perlite and fine vermiculite, but I thought I'd save myself the expense of bulk buying the later two this year.
Now on to the business at hand. I'm having some issues with the Purple Majesty (one of the varieties planted in the compost bags) which I initially ascribed to under-watering. Specifically, from approximately two weeks ago the plant began to decline, with increasingly yellow and rolled leaves (and more recently, wilting leaves). I responded by deep watering this variety when I deemed appropriate, but now I'm of the opinion that the original decline was related to over- rather than under-watering. One of the things which points to this is that I neglected to pierce drainage holes in the compost bag in question (as they do not come with drainage eyelets as do binafide potato bags). Whilst this doesn't appear to have affected the other compost bagged variety (Lady Balfour), I can only guess that it's a matter of time before it does. Anyway, I pierced the offending compost bag near the bottom and fingered the soil (Oo er!) and it's definitely saturated, and quite possibly beyond saturated. I also pierced a hole further up the bag (about 1 foot or ⅓ of the way up) and the soil their feels relatively dry. I wouldn't describe it as parched, but then I wouldn't describe it as saturated either.
So as you can fathom, as a relative novice and perennial bungler in the garden, I'm in a bit of a bind. I'm not yet certain that over-watering is the culprit (as the column of soil doesn't appear to be uniformly soaked) but assuming that this is the issue, what is the best course of action? I've pierced a number of holes around the base of the compost bag (approximately 1 inch above the base, as I can't access the base itself) so should I simply stop watering for a while or until the plant shows signs of improving vigour? Should I prune the plant a little to decrease water loss from the leaves? Any advice would be greatly appreciated.
I've included a number of photos, including one of a more recent volunteer Purple Majesty plant which demonstrates the decline rather nicely (prior to this decline, the main Purple Majesty plant was the greenest of all of the varieties I'm growing). Hopefully these will help with diagnosis and/or prognosis should there be other culprits.
The Main, declining Purple Majesty plant:
The tiny volunteer Purple Majesty for reference:
All five varieties with Purple Majesty on the far left, the slightly legger Mayan Gold in the middle, Lady Balfour on the far right and Charlotte and Vivaldi in between and near the rear:
Kind Regards,
Lee.
P.S. The only other (non-)issue I'm having is with the Mayan Gold variety. Specifically, the plant appears rather leggy and has smaller leaves. Other than than the plant appears perfectly healthy, so I don't know whether this is characteristic of this variety or something more worrisome. The Mayan Gold potatoes were planted in a slightly heaver mix, as the clay I mixed in to this bag (planted a couple of weeks later than the other varieties) was far less silty.
I have been lurking these forums for a while now, and having picked up a fair few useful tips I thought it wise to register and elicit some much needed advice about an issue I'm having with my container grown potatoes.
First a little background. This is my second year growing potatoes in containers (potato bags specifically) and this year I'm growing five varieties. Two varieties (Purple Majesty and Lady Balfour) in re-purposed garden compost bags, and three varieties (Charlotte, Mayan Gold and Vivaldi) in bonafide, store bought potato bags. This year I'm growing my potatoes in a mixture of loam, Pro-Grow™ soil improver, compost and Hertfordshire clay (we've renovating part of the garden and had a lot of this slight silty clay left over. Since I'd heard that potatoes are good at breaking down clay, I thought I'd mix some in). Last year I used a mixture of loam, compost, coarse perlite and fine vermiculite, but I thought I'd save myself the expense of bulk buying the later two this year.
Now on to the business at hand. I'm having some issues with the Purple Majesty (one of the varieties planted in the compost bags) which I initially ascribed to under-watering. Specifically, from approximately two weeks ago the plant began to decline, with increasingly yellow and rolled leaves (and more recently, wilting leaves). I responded by deep watering this variety when I deemed appropriate, but now I'm of the opinion that the original decline was related to over- rather than under-watering. One of the things which points to this is that I neglected to pierce drainage holes in the compost bag in question (as they do not come with drainage eyelets as do binafide potato bags). Whilst this doesn't appear to have affected the other compost bagged variety (Lady Balfour), I can only guess that it's a matter of time before it does. Anyway, I pierced the offending compost bag near the bottom and fingered the soil (Oo er!) and it's definitely saturated, and quite possibly beyond saturated. I also pierced a hole further up the bag (about 1 foot or ⅓ of the way up) and the soil their feels relatively dry. I wouldn't describe it as parched, but then I wouldn't describe it as saturated either.
So as you can fathom, as a relative novice and perennial bungler in the garden, I'm in a bit of a bind. I'm not yet certain that over-watering is the culprit (as the column of soil doesn't appear to be uniformly soaked) but assuming that this is the issue, what is the best course of action? I've pierced a number of holes around the base of the compost bag (approximately 1 inch above the base, as I can't access the base itself) so should I simply stop watering for a while or until the plant shows signs of improving vigour? Should I prune the plant a little to decrease water loss from the leaves? Any advice would be greatly appreciated.
I've included a number of photos, including one of a more recent volunteer Purple Majesty plant which demonstrates the decline rather nicely (prior to this decline, the main Purple Majesty plant was the greenest of all of the varieties I'm growing). Hopefully these will help with diagnosis and/or prognosis should there be other culprits.
The Main, declining Purple Majesty plant:
The tiny volunteer Purple Majesty for reference:
All five varieties with Purple Majesty on the far left, the slightly legger Mayan Gold in the middle, Lady Balfour on the far right and Charlotte and Vivaldi in between and near the rear:
Kind Regards,
Lee.
P.S. The only other (non-)issue I'm having is with the Mayan Gold variety. Specifically, the plant appears rather leggy and has smaller leaves. Other than than the plant appears perfectly healthy, so I don't know whether this is characteristic of this variety or something more worrisome. The Mayan Gold potatoes were planted in a slightly heaver mix, as the clay I mixed in to this bag (planted a couple of weeks later than the other varieties) was far less silty.
Comment