Planning ahead to Spring, Is it ok to plant potatoes through weed suppressant fabric? Would they still require earthing up if undercover? And if i can grow them under cover, can i just plant them straight in without lifting off the fabric and digging out any hardier weeds that may have survived the sunblock?
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Planting Potatoes through weed resistant membrane?
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Yes, no, and yes
My first year I planted all my spuds through weed control fabric - just cut holes at about 18 inch intervals then dug a hole with a trowel and dropped the spud in. Pretty much left them to themselves after that except for some liquid feed about mid season. Crop was okay, not huge but would have been better with more feed or some manure.
Definitely worth doing though as a way to use uncleared ground. Works for beans, courgettes, squashes and sweetcorn too
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I did it last year on a section of the plot which had never been dug. Simply cut back the grass, dug up the big weeds, covered in card and then cut through and planted spuds with a bulb planter. Added a bit of potato feed and then weighted the card with bits of wood, old tyres etc. Looked a bit grotty until the potato foilage took over but got a brilliant crop in terms of number of Charlottes, no slug damage really at all but they never seem to go for my spuds - too busy eating baby lettuce / brassicas I think! Well worth a go and the soil was easier to dig over after the roots of the weeds had died off a lot and the beds that are now there have definitely benefitted.
Some of us live in the past, always talking about back then. Some of us live in the future, always planning what we are going to do. And, then there are those, who neither look behind or ahead, but just enjoy the moment of right now.
Which one are you and is it how you want to be?
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There are a few issues here the first one being I'm puzzled as to why you would you want to grow potatoes through membrane in the first place. One of the major benefits of growing potatoes is that because the ground is worked continuously throughout the season (digging, trenching and setting up ridges, furrowing up and finally harvesting) it is an extremely useful crop for cleaning up a piece of ground. I'd go so far as to say that anyone taking over a new plot that is in poor condition might well be advised to crop the whole area in potatoes the first season. The haulms/shaws also keep down weedgrowth by excluding light but you will get that advantage whatever system you use.
Having said that, potatoes will grow in any no dig system provided the haulms or shaws, as we Scots call them, can get out in to the open air and the tubers are placed on or in soil or compost so that the roots have access to moisture and nutrients. I have in the past just placed potatoes on the ground and emptied the contents of my compost heap over them and had a good crop.
If slugs are a problem, best organic way to cure this problem is to invest in some slug nematodes. Ground needs to be around 55 degrees for them to work but they do work very well. If growing conventionally best time to apply them is just before furrowing/earthing up.
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Originally posted by Aberdeenplotter View PostThere are a few issues here the first one being I'm puzzled as to why you would you want to grow potatoes through membrane in the first place. One of the major benefits of growing potatoes is that because the ground is worked continuously throughout the season (digging, trenching and setting up ridges, furrowing up and finally harvesting) it is an extremely useful crop for cleaning up a piece of ground. I'd go so far as to say that anyone taking over a new plot that is in poor condition might well be advised to crop the whole area in potatoes the first season. The haulms/shaws also keep down weedgrowth by excluding light but you will get that advantage whatever system you use.
Some of us live in the past, always talking about back then. Some of us live in the future, always planning what we are going to do. And, then there are those, who neither look behind or ahead, but just enjoy the moment of right now.
Which one are you and is it how you want to be?
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