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Oh dear I feel like aright dunce. Mine (1st/2nd and Salad) had little chits already, and I put them in the ground at the weekend. seeing as I always have rogue potato plants from previous year cropping up all over the place, Ithought they'd be tough enough.
Oh well - we'll see what somes up.
If you have a frost forecast put some fleece over them and they should be fine FB or you could cover them with Black plastic and when the shoots start to push it up carefully cut a cross in it and let them grow thru it ... save earthing up.
ntg
Never be afraid to try something new.
Remember that a lone amateur built the Ark.
A large group of professionals built the Titanic
I think your spuds will be fine in the ground FB - you're quite far south so it would have to be a pretty comprehensive frost for the tubers to get damaged. Nick's idea about covering the ground with fleece or plastic is a good one if you want a little extra insurance. Could get them going faster too.
You'd still need to earth-up though I reckon; you must protect the leaves from frost as they emerge. We can have a late frost up until May, and if the leaves get nipped then the plants will take a long time to recover.
I'm not sure if anyone will reply to this, as I'm a little late, but my boyfriends had his spuds in our shed (unheated) since mid Jan when he got them, but most of them have rotten. We just keep having to throw them out. All of the ones at the garden centres look perfect. We've since moved them in - onto a North-facing window sill but I realy don't know what I should be doing with them. Is this better for them?
Spuds for chitting want to be somewhere cool, light (not direct light) and dry (not damp), but of course you can plant seed spuds without first chitting them - there is plenty of discussion over to chit or not.
To see a world in a grain of sand
And a heaven in a wild flower
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