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Hi. I haven't any photos but noticed yesterday that where the flowers on my potatoes have dropped, there are little green hard fruit - similar in appearance to tomatoesAny idea what they may be? Will I need to cut them off?
They ARE the fruits but are NOT similar to tomatoes, they are in fact toxic. However, I'm looking for some of these to grow on. Would you mind leaving them on the plant till you are ready to eat the spuds and then send them to me? I'll send you a pm and I'll pay the postage and packing costs. I'd love to grow some from true seed - but my earlies just drop their flowers without setting the fruits.
- they are poisonsous! Are great if you want to try a pots from seed experiment - which I'm attempting this year with Salad Blues which have produced many fruits.
If you want to leave them on plants fine for experiment - but if you have kids (or animals such as dogs - who tend to take a chance at anything and everything greedy b's!) who may be tempted to pick off and try - thinking they're toms - I'd recommend you remove them from the plants pronto.
Wasn't sure how potentially deadly the poisons were until I read this wiki entry
I took hundreds off last year with the intention of growing them but instead I raked them up by mistake and dumped them on the compost heap!
Some potatoes are hybrids methinks so their seed may be sterile?
Just to reiterate DO NOT EAT>>>>VERY POISONOUS
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)
Isn't it weird that the same family can have such different fruits - tomatoes and aubergines etc, lovely edible fruit - potatoes and belladonna - the fruit will kill you as soon as look at you...
The whole potato plant contains poisonous substances, but the tubers are fine to eat if well cooked and, in the case of greening spuds, if you chop off the green parts - at least that's what me old mum always used to do and, as the saying goes, it never did us any harm...
Warning: I have a dangerous tendency to act like I know what I'm talking about.
I'm growing potatoes from seed this year. I managed to harvest the seeds last year from some supermarket king edwards. The tubers got hit by blight but the nice thing about TPS (true potato seed) is that it can't spread blight!
Apparently yields are likely to be less then with a 'seed' potato but it's more fun from seed!
I'll let you know how i got on.
for info i picked the fruit green and left it to ripen (turn black) by a sunny window. After this i scraped thr flesh and seeds into some kitchen paper. Once dried i put these in an envelope for safe keeping and planted in march.
Professor Flummery Pudding has anounced the result of the great potato seed trials and has produced a pumpkin sized potato that grew with its own quilt on to protect it from the frost
A garden is a lovesome thing, God wot! (Thomas Edward Brown)
Duronal - you seem to be at least one on here who is trying 'from seed' method.
I have many fruits well-formed on my plants - could you indicate what size the fruits have to be before picking off and ripening - prior to seed harvest?
I have Salad Blues fruiting merrily - but they will soon be ready for harvest - I am happy to leave one plant much longer if necessary to get the desired size of fruit as an experiment (and not to disappoint Flum!). At the time of flowering they were the only ones in close proximity in bloom - so are likely to be as 'true' as nature can provide. I'd really like to have a go - even if it may turn out to be a 2yr cycle.
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