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Lady Crystal and Red Duke of York

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  • Lady Crystal and Red Duke of York

    Hi - I have a couple of questions on these if you dont mind.
    I planted a few of each in large pots in early February in the tunnel for extra earlies.

    The Red Duke of York are flowering now. So is this the good time to give them a feed of liquid tomato food?

    Also, do Lady Crystal have flowers? I thought these would be earlier than the Duke of York but they dont have any flowers (yet???).

    Thanks a lot!

  • #2
    Lady Christl rarely has flowers see this website
    Variety

    I don't usually wait for earlies to flower, have a rummage in the pots and see if the spuds are big enough yet

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    • #3
      Thanks a lot Thelma, that's a good website!

      Comment


      • #4
        is this the good time to give them a feed of liquid tomato food?
        As the idea behind tomato growing is to grow lots of fruit, I'm not so sure that this wouldn't be counterproductive - it's likely to encourage the tattie seeds at the expense of the tuber growth, because it has the higher ratio of potassium(I think it's that) that will encourage flowering rather than foliar or root growth.
        Personally, I would be feeding something like seaweed feed, comfrey tea, or if you really want to go commercial, potato fertiliser, rather than tomato feed.
        I can tell you that urine worked well on my RDOY's...
        There's no point reading history if you don't use the lessons it teaches.

        Head-hunted member of the Nutter's Club - can I get my cranium back please ?

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        • #5
          Thanks snohare, I have plenty of that
          I thought it was strange too but I'm sure I read somewhere that tomato feed is good for spuds in the later stages. Especially since I have plenty of it on hand for the toms later in the summer!
          Cheers

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          • #6
            I suppose potatoes are fruit when you think about it, its just that we tend to keep the tubers covered with soil to stop them growing green and to protect them from frosts.
            So to answer my own question, yes feed them now with tomato food

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            • #7
              I harvested a bucket of Lady Christl spuds this week (planted 6th Feb) and after 14 weeks I would normally expect about 600g from one spud. However due to the extremely slow Feb and March I only harvested 70g of very small ones. Very tasty though!

              The plant looked pretty substantial but had no flowers,and coincidentally my RDOY potatoes are just starting to show some flowers.

              Originally posted by snohare View Post
              As the idea behind tomato growing is to grow lots of fruit, I'm not so sure that this wouldn't be counterproductive - it's likely to encourage the tattie seeds at the expense of the tuber growth, because it has the higher ratio of potassium(I think it's that) that will encourage flowering rather than foliar or root growth.
              Personally, I would be feeding something like seaweed feed, comfrey tea, or if you really want to go commercial, potato fertiliser, rather than tomato feed.
              I can tell you that urine worked well on my RDOY's...
              You are correct that Potassium is used for flowers and fruits, however looking up in my Diploma notes it is also used for secondary thickening (when a plant goes woody or parts thicken up). This is also what happens to potato roots. The roots grow then the end of each roots thickens up into a potato, which hopefully explains why potassium is good for spuds.

              Having said that plants need a good amount of all NPK right through the whole growing process for all sorts of different functions, aside from the obvious well known functions.

              Hope that helps.
              The more help a man has in his garden, the less it belongs to him.
              William M. Davies

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              • #8
                Brilliant! Thanks for that Paulie, it does make sense. I'm going to be a bit more patient with the spuds and give them a good feed and a few more waterings. They were very slow to break the surface with the cold alright so I suspect there's not much going on yet.
                Thanks

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                • #9
                  I start my earlies on tomorite week 7 or 8. Feed them once a week until harvest, I started this regime some years ago and noticed a considerable increase in yield.

                  I have RDoY and LadyC in pots and dustbins but the weather has not been conducive to a early harvest this year. My notes tell me the ones in BFBs were planted on 05/03 in the GH but the first sign of germination was 29/03 I will therefore furttle back end of this month.

                  I have been growing LadyC for a number of years some in BFBs and some in dustbins, these are left to grow on to about 15 to 18 weeks for chippersw and bakers, still never seen one flower.

                  Potty
                  Potty by name Potty by nature.

                  By appointment of VeggieChicken Member of the Nutters club.


                  We hang petty thieves and appoint great ones to public office.

                  Aesop 620BC-560BC

                  sigpic

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                  • #10
                    Originally posted by redser View Post
                    I suppose potatoes are fruit when you think about it,
                    No, they're not. The fruit referred to is the tomato like fruit that follow the flowers.

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                    • #11
                      My RDOY are ahead of the LC's in bags in my tunnel. Flowers just coming out on the former planted 25/2. They get pee!
                      "A life lived in fear is a life half lived."

                      PS. I just don't have enough time to say hello to everyone as they join so please take this as a delighted to see you here!

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                      • #12
                        Thought for a brief mo that you were starting a bodice ripper redser

                        "Lady Cristal and the Red Duke of York", a historical tale of betrayal and passion, gardening and potatoes, to rival Lady Chatterley!!!
                        Location - Leicestershire - Chisit-land
                        Endless wonder.

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                        • #13
                          Originally posted by Potstubsdustbins View Post
                          I start my earlies on tomorite week 7 or 8. Feed them once a week until harvest, I started this regime some years ago and noticed a considerable increase in yield.

                          I have RDoY and LadyC in pots and dustbins but the weather has not been conducive to a early harvest this year. My notes tell me the ones in BFBs were planted on 05/03 in the GH but the first sign of germination was 29/03 I will therefore furttle back end of this month.

                          I have been growing LadyC for a number of years some in BFBs and some in dustbins, these are left to grow on to about 15 to 18 weeks for chippersw and bakers, still never seen one flower.

                          Potty
                          Thanks potty, great detail as usual, I gave them all a feed this evening. Furtled a little but found nadda.

                          Originally posted by rustylady View Post
                          No, they're not. The fruit referred to is the tomato like fruit that follow the flowers.
                          Thanks

                          Originally posted by marchogaeth View Post
                          My RDOY are ahead of the LC's in bags in my tunnel. Flowers just coming out on the former planted 25/2. They get pee!
                          Mine will too.

                          Originally posted by mothhawk View Post
                          Thought for a brief mo that you were starting a bodice ripper redser

                          "Lady Cristal and the Red Duke of York", a historical tale of betrayal and passion, gardening and potatoes, to rival Lady Chatterley!!!
                          'This tale will make you laugh, cry, and pee, all at the same time'

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                          • #14
                            I've already had a few meals of earlies grown in containers in the greenhouse and planted mid February. Like Paulieb the yields are dramatically down although there is plenty of top growth and the feeding regime is broadly similar to previous years. I use BFB as a general fertilizer in the potting mix and then alternate feeds of seaweed tea and tomato feed. This cold spring seems to have had a significant effect on tuber production but I'm hoping the outside plantings will do much better now things are a bit warmer.

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                            • #15
                              In theory my first earlies in the tunnel should be ready by now (ie if you look at the calendar) but I'm leaving them an extra couple of weeks this year as they got off to such a slow start. As they're in the ground I don't feed them at all but prepare the ground well and let the soil feed them but obviously in pots it is rather different.

                              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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