Second Early Potato – Kestrel
Kestrel have grown very well this season, and have grown into big potatoes.
Kestrel has:

kestrel-potato-variety
Kestrel is well worth growing as a second early variety.
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Sharpe’s Express new potatoes have bulked up in the last 10 days, thanks to the rain.

new-potatoes
These potatoes are from one Sharpe’s Express plant and weighed exactly 1kg!!

early-potatoes
Click the link to see a video showing how to check if new potatoes are big enough to dig.
Harvesting Sharpe’s Express New Potatoes gives the gardener great pleasure!
The Lady Christl variety of new potatoes, planted in February, have yielded 1.1kg from one root.

ladychrstl-new-potatoes
The seed potatoes were spaced at 30cm, so the yield per sq m is good.
The potato variety Lady Christl is:
- high yielding variety of numerous uniform attractive tubers.
- first early.
- long, oval tuber.
- good all round disease resistance, although slightly susceptible to Foliage Blight.
- excellent cooking qualities.
- yellow fleshed.
The Lady Christl variety of new potatoes is well worth growing producing a high yield of delicious potatoes.
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New potatoes will not store, unless they are stored in a freezer.
New potatoes have not set their skin, which means that the skin will easily scrape off with a knife.

scraping-new-potatoes
Potatoes need to have a set skin which will not scrape off, before they will store over the winter.

new-potatoes-lifted
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The potato variety called International Kidney is the most important crop on Jersey, produced and sold as Jersey Royal new potatoes.

jersey royals
Jersey Royals, or International Kidney, are:
- second earlies
- can also be used as a general purpose early crop
- very waxy potato
- good salad potato
- tasty new potatoes

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Large seed potatoes may be cut into several pieces, as long as each piece
contains at least one eye. The ideal seed potato is the size of a hen’s egg.
The eye of the potato is a leaf scar with a depressed lateral bud. This bud will
grow into the shoot, which appears above ground, and also produces the new tubers below ground. When the eye first starts to grow the new shoot is called a chit.
How to Divide, Cut or Split Seed Potatoes:
- divide potatoes a day or two before planting, so they have time to heal
- use a clean knife, to prevent spreading disease from one potato to another
- cut when sprouts/chits are 1/4″ long pieces should be about the size of a small egg.
- cut pieces should be block shaped, with at least one eye or sprout, but two are preferred. Thin slices of potato are no good.
- cut lengthwise, across the top, to divide the chits that usually group there.

potato-chit-day20

MBard-potato-chit-day20
- part of the center core of the potato should be in each piece.
- cover the cut potatoes with powdered limestone, to dry the cut up. Or sprinkle with flowers of sulphur, to stop any disease entering the cuts.
- let the potatoes “heal” by storing them at 65-70 degrees with fairly high humidity. The humidity is important to stop the potatoes dehydrating. The cut surface will develop a protective coat that can help prevent seed decay. Covering the box with clear plastic film will also stop dehydration.
There are pros and cons to cutting seed potatoes into several pieces before they are planted.
The advantages of splitting seed potatoes are:
- large seed potatoes are utilised to the full
- less tubers are produced per seed, so each tuber harvested is bigger
- apical dominance is broken, releasing more eyes to sprout
- expensive seed potatoes go further in the vegetable garden
- saves buying another packet, if just need one more seed to finish the row
Disadvantages of dividing seed potatoes are:
- bacteria & pathogens may be spread between the potatoes on the cutting knife.
- Large seed potatoes may be divided up into several pieces, as long as each piece contains at least one eye, to achieve the ideal seed potato size, equivalent toa hen’s egg.
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Hi Top Veg,
Just to answer your question about my signal box.So far I have relied on the
p-lants seeding themselves, some of the plants are taking over so this year I
will have to split plants up and move them around a bit.I wil also add seed
this year to introduce a bit more variety.
Cheers Mark
Comment by Mark – January 15, 2008 7:52 pm
Hi Mark
That is amazing – so good to know they are reseeding. Do you have signal box
open days?
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