Yes, it's potato planting time again! As cold and wet as it has been, the weather is perfect just now for getting the spuds in - the soil is moist but workable, and cold but warming up. We have a few warm days forecast and then rain - if you were a seed potato you would be very happy with that forecast!
Karl opened up the trenches to warm the soil more and to add amendments before planting. The seed potato sends roots down so the nutrients want to be below the planted potato. As it grows, potatoes will form above the seed potato so that soil needs to be loose, or even not soil at all. Grass, leaves, straw - as long as the seed pieces are covered. The deeper the cover, the more potatoes you get. Sorry, this wasn't meant to become a how-to.
Here are the potatoes in four trenches - from left to right we have Red Maria, Blue Gold, Bintje and then a mixed row. They would have photographed a lot better if I had washed a few so you could see the colours rather than this brown on brown situation.
The potatoes look very close together, but they aren't, they are spaced one foot apart in the row. The rows are 220' long.
The next step is getting the potatoes covered. Karl is covering the first row with leaf mold - it makes the potatoes much easier to harvest, but we don't have enough for all four rows, so the other rows will be covered with the soil from their trenches. This is the back breaking part - it is done using a hoe.
I've got two rows done, where's Karl?
Oh, there he is - I think I'll leave the last row for him while I go in for a cup of tea.
Showing posts with label fieldwork. Show all posts
Showing posts with label fieldwork. Show all posts
06 April 2013
05 November 2012
Frost Warning
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Karl harvesting pan di zucchero by lantern light. |
We're expecting a heavy frost tonight. Rather than wait until late morning for the crops to thaw out, we began harvesting this evening. The fancy light system is a Coleman propane lantern on an upside down 5 gallon bucket - it throws light a lot further than you might imagine. With two lanterns I think we could have worked a whole row at a time without having to more them.
The more tender vegetables are covered with floating row covers to protect them from the frost. In windy weather these tend to lift no matter how much we weight them down, but it is quite still outside and the forecast isn't calling for high winds.
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Karl tucking the row covers in. |
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