Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

potato follow on crop

Collapse

X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • potato follow on crop

    This is my first year growing potatoes. I have already bought some pink fir apple and charlotte potatoes and was hoping to grow some swift or lady cristal in pots but everwhere I tried have sold out of the smaller 1 kg sacks of the very earlies so looks like I am going to have to buy a 2.5kg sack.
    I am not going to waste them so will plant some in the ground. SO if I plant them around begining of march and they take about 8 to 10 weeks to mature then they should be cleared by mid may? Could I then use the same bed to plant out my squash plants or to grow finger size carrots?

  • #2
    Absolutely! the potatoes will have broken up the ground nicely so putting a crop in afterwards makes best use of the space.

    I can't remember which order you are supposed to rotate but i'm sure carrots or squash shoul be fine, in fact i'd chuck anything that would grow in there! (apart from more spuds or tomatoes/peppers/aubergines as they are from the same family).

    I grew a green manure crop of mustard after my potatoes last year, i have the space on my lottie and it cleans the ground up nicely (reduces pests and soil diseases) and adds valuable organic matter to my clay soil. You could put any green manure in though if you wanted - clover is good for nitrogen fixing for example.
    There's vegetable growing in the family, but I must be adopted
    Happy Gardening!

    Comment


    • #3
      Agree with protea.....empty soil feeds nobody! Peas or beans would be good after early tatties, followed by Spring cabbage! Hate to see bare soil, if nothing else, stick a green manure crop in!
      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


      Comment


      • #4
        Legumes, roots then brassicas. Thats the rotation.
        But yes as long as you do not grow the same family on the same ground for 3 years you are ok.
        This crop rotation is the most tricky bit about gyo. Knowing what you can put where and when. Hate to see bare soil too.

        Comment


        • #5
          Originally posted by vicki lorraine View Post
          Legumes, roots then brassicas. Thats the rotation.
          But yes as long as you do not grow the same family on the same ground for 3 years you are ok.
          This crop rotation is the most tricky bit about gyo. Knowing what you can put where and when. Hate to see bare soil too.
          To be honest I don't stick to a rigid rotation but I would have thought the fixated nitrogen left from the legumes would have been more useful to the Brassicas than the roots?

          What the heck, as long as crops are rotated!
          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


          Comment


          • #6
            I hate to see bare soil too, as soon as a patch is cleared, something can go in. I've followed earlies on with winter leeks, brassica, runner beans, catch crops of salad veg, and main crops of e.g. carrots and beetroot which will overwinter in the soil. I keep modules planted up so that there's always something ready to go in

            Just had a thought; my PFA seemed to be later than other spuds, are they maincrop?
            SSx
            not every situation requires a big onion

            Comment


            • #7
              My apoligies Snadger
              YOu are correct - Legumes, brassicas then roots.

              Comment


              • #8
                Yes SS they are and can be harvested quite late, into October generally.
                I just love her, but cant stand squealers.

                Comment


                • #9
                  Aha, that explains it ... I put garlic in after the PFA came out this year
                  SSx
                  not every situation requires a big onion

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    thank you everyone. I am finding the whole "what to put where after what " bit so confusing. I only have about 19 sq yards (yes, another one who can't go metric ) which I am boosting with containers this year. Last year was my first experiment and I did grow quite a few things, strawberrys, runner beans, courgettes, tomatoes, peas, dwarf french beans, peppers and chillis, raddish, lettuce and rocket. Oh and my daughter grew a pumpkin plant,only had room for 1. once the crops had been harvested I was at a loss at what to put in after and so the ground has been left bare since .

                    I have bought a couple of books sinceand one of them by joy larcom has a plan for a family plot. there are suggestions on there for follow on crops but most seem to be for things like chicory and bitter salad stuf that I would not eat. I have not grown brassicas yet (except raddish? is this a brassica?) but to be honest appart from maybe sprouting broccoli I don't think we would eat them. I am the only person apart from the rabbit who will eat cabbage and we both prefer chard

                    Comment


                    • #11
                      Yes, we could grow salad for England on our plot, it grows beautifully and none of us eats it!

                      My rotation is very simple. When a crop goes in, so does a large label with the family group e.g. Potatoes, Tomatoes, Beans, Roots, Alliums, Misc, Squash etc. When the crop comes out, the label stays in until a new crop is planted with a new label. That way, you know what went before in individual beds. I went back to my notes last year, here are some non-salady things that went in as follow-ons.

                      July
                      Sown: Beetroot, carrot, maincrop peas, fennel, kohlrabi, parsley, turnip, cauliflower All Year Round
                      Transplanted: Purple sprouting broccoli, cauliflower (for winter and spring), leeks

                      August
                      Sown: Beetroot, carrot, autumn onions, seed and sets, winter hardy spring onions. At the end of August, will sow a pot of carrot for winter in the greenhouse.
                      Transplanted: Leeks, fennel, cauliflower

                      September
                      Sown: Beetroot, carrot, winter spinach (around the middle of the month) - variety Bordeaux - overwintering onion sets. In 2007 I'll try sowing turnip-rooted chervil this month.
                      Transplanted: Overwintering onion seed and Spring cabbage

                      October
                      Sown: Beetroot, carrot, Cauliflower for early summer, overwintering broadies, winter spinach, garlic.
                      Transplanted: Spring cabbage plugs (bought)

                      November
                      Sown: Garlic, overwintering broadies, overwintering onion sets

                      Not a chard, kale, lettuce, mizuna, texcel green or chicory in sight! There's always something you can put in or, failing that, green manure and mulch
                      Last edited by supersprout; 30-01-2007, 08:00 AM.
                      SSx
                      not every situation requires a big onion

                      Comment


                      • #12
                        Originally posted by supersprout View Post
                        Aha, that explains it ... I put garlic in after the PFA came out this year
                        Me too, the PFA are late maincrop, but worth it!
                        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


                        Comment


                        • #13
                          Originally posted by supersprout View Post
                          Yes, we could grow salad for England on our plot, it grows beautifully and none of us eats it!

                          My rotation is very simple. When a crop goes in, so does a large label with the family group e.g. Potatoes, Tomatoes, Beans, Roots, Alliums, Misc, Squash etc. When the crop comes out, the label stays in until a new crop is planted with a new label. That way, you know what went before in individual beds. I went back to my notes last year, here are some non-salady things that went in as follow-ons.

                          July
                          Sown: Beetroot, carrot, maincrop peas, fennel, kohlrabi, parsley, turnip, cauliflower All Year Round
                          Transplanted: Purple sprouting broccoli, cauliflower (for winter and spring), leeks

                          August
                          Sown: Beetroot, carrot, autumn onions, seed and sets, winter hardy spring onions. At the end of August, will sow a pot of carrot for winter in the greenhouse.
                          Transplanted: Leeks, fennel, cauliflower

                          September
                          Sown: Beetroot, carrot, winter spinach (around the middle of the month) - variety Bordeaux - overwintering onion sets. In 2007 I'll try sowing turnip-rooted chervil this month.
                          Transplanted: Overwintering onion seed and Spring cabbage

                          October
                          Sown: Beetroot, carrot, Cauliflower for early summer, overwintering broadies, winter spinach, garlic.
                          Transplanted: Spring cabbage plugs (bought)

                          November
                          Sown: Garlic, overwintering broadies, overwintering onion sets

                          Not a chard, kale, lettuce, mizuna, texcel green or chicory in sight! There's always something you can put in or, failing that, green manure and mulch
                          Are you saying you don't like kale supersprout? With so many varieties available they really are a worthy vegetable and a neccessity in my plot! Spring Cabbage is a close second though so I'll let you off!
                          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


                          Comment


                          • #14
                            Going to try kale this year for the first time. I really like the stuff, but there's clubroot in my garden and at the lottie Time for lots of lime and rhubarb leaves, methinks.
                            Kris

                            I child-proofed my house, but they still manage to get in.

                            Muddy Musings - a blog

                            Comment


                            • #15
                              Originally posted by Snadger View Post
                              Are you saying you don't like kale supersprout? Spring Cabbage is a close second though so I'll let you off!

                              I'll eat most things Snadger, but the other half of my household (24-year old son) won't touch:

                              Jerusalem Artichokes
                              Globe artichokes
                              Kale
                              Parsnip
                              Aubergines
                              Raw tomatoes (though he'll eat passata til it comes out of his ears)

                              I'm ambivalent about kale so I stopped growing it. And he chomps his way through industrial quantities of alliums, squash, courgettes, spuds, carrot and swede, so I let him off too
                              SSx
                              not every situation requires a big onion

                              Comment

                              Latest Topics

                              Collapse

                              Recent Blog Posts

                              Collapse
                              Working...
                              X