I did a search on the forum for this before I posted, but couldn't find anything, so if this has been discussed before, sorry! I planted IK the first week in April, and the haulms are big and sturdy looking, but no sign of flowers yet. Are they late flowerers, because I understood they were first earlies.
Meg
I/K are 2nd earlies, and somewhere I read they could be called main crop. I grow them every year. I planted mine in March and I got some up yesterday. They were delicious. Not a heavy cropper and I don't wait for them to flower. I get them up over a few weeks. My favourite spud. Perhaps yours will need another 2-3 weeks.
Yes, will give them up to the middle of July - got my seed potatoes from Dobbies this year, and they call them first earlies - (http://www.dobbies.com/International-Kidney-Jersey-Royals-Seed-Potatoes-2-4kg-Bag/pid-289735) but will go with your suggestion. Thanks
Meg
Confusing isn't it? I thought of them as 1st earlies until this year. Now I use the British Potato Database. I/k have white flowers by the way.
On JBA's potato website he has them down as an early that can be used for maincrop as well, you learn something new every day. ??? ;D
With first earlies you don't wait for the flowers. Just have a firkle and dig 'em up! (Then plant leeks!)
But IK - or Jersey Royals - aren't really first earlies (unless you live in Jersey, that is, which is cheating). They are second earlies or early maincrop in England; on my soil somewhere between Home Guard and British Queen.
I have not grown them before but I am amazed at the size of the plants they are enormous, right next to home guard. Just started to crop the Home Guard and was wondering what should come next. But do the IK taste as good if left a while longer. I am hoping todays rain will fatten up a few more spuds.
Everything I dig up has a huge number of spudlets and I keept wishing I had left it a little loner
They are not bad left to get bigger.
Quote from: Trevor_D on June 12, 2011, 21:36:46
With first earlies you don't wait for the flowers. Just have a firkle and dig 'em up! (Then plant leeks!)
As soon as it stops raining long enough (South West of Scotland has had rain most of May/June!!) I'll have a firkle and see what's there)
Thanks for your help everyone.
Meg
I've always thought of IK as 1st earlies too. Grew them last year and gave them 12 weeks - March to June - they were delicious!
My first attempt at IK , ( I paid 2.99 to 10 ! ) Dug up first root today, they look great , Lamb shank is on slow cook as I type...
If you want them to taste like Jersey Royals you need to put plenty of seaweed meal in there or dried seaweed woudl be better... IN Jersey they fertilise the fields with seaweed and it's what makes them taste the way they do....
IK is quite an old fashioned variety and was bred before the more modern compact foliage strains were developed..... if you want to see a monster though look at a Pink Fir Apple if it's had a decent season sometiem around September.... they get proper big.....
chrisc
Yep my pink fir apple are a good size and in flower already which I thought was a bit early. No flowers on my 2nd earlies yet [although I've pinched a few for Sunday lunch.] Its been cool and dry until Sunday which might have held them back a bit. No rush unless the rain continues and blight rears its head. I want a good crop for winter ;)