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Planting potatoes

Started by compo49, April 17, 2008, 20:53:52

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compo49

HI . Ive planted potatoes on top of manure (not fresh) in trenches i got it from a farm in the beginning of January will they be OK? or should i have put some soil on top of it first , the have  been in about 2 to 3wks.  :-\

compo49


Plot69

Most of the old boys at my place do it that way so I should say they'll be fine.

I rotorvate barrow loads of manure where my tates are going and they was fine last year.
Tony.

Sow it, grow it, eat it.

sarah

yes they will be fine. i do it that way. its actually pretty hard to do much  wrong with potatoes.  ;) they can take a good two to three weeks to come up if the weather is chilly and if you have planted them a bit deep. panic not. :D

kt.

Patience is a virtue my good man.   All in good time ;)
All you do and all you see is all your life will ever be

davyw1

Quote from: compo49 on April 17, 2008, 20:53:52
HI . Ive planted potatoes on top of manure (not fresh) in trenches i got it from a farm in the beginning of January will they be OK? or should i have put some soil on top of it first , the have  been in about 2 to 3wks.  :-\

A thought, why put the manure under the potato set when the tuber grows upwards and you have put the  feed is below it
When you wake up on a morning say "good morning world" and be grateful

DAVY

Barnowl


GrannieAnnie

I only have fresh manure (well, it is dryer than fresh, about 2 months old).
If I chopped it up and mixed it say half and half with soil would that still be too strong for potatoes?
The handle on your recliner does not qualify as an exercise machine.

calendula

spuds love manure - my spud beds get copious amounts of new manure in the winter and I don't dig it in just leave it as it gets slightly dug in when I plant the spuds - I also think all the manure helps keep the soil warmer as well as keeping slugs away - it all magically disappears by the time I come to pull the spuds  :)

allaboutliverpool

I mispent my youth working on an old fashioned farm in the 1950's during every school holiday, driving the tractor by the age of 10 (no anti-roll bars on the old Ferguson), mucking out pigs, milking cows by hand, and tending the land.
The potatoes were planted in ploughed furrows into which copious amounts of cow manure has been added. The potatoes were placed by hand into the manure before covering up with soil.

It was part of the farmers livelihood and they always grew well!

Happy days without TV or money!

http://www.allaboutliverpool.com/allaboutallotments_Vegetables_potatoes.html


Robert_Brenchley

That was proper farming which cared for the land instead of mining it.

Gazfoz

Yes a gentler age. You wouldn't make any money doing it that way now.
How very sad.
Progress, we are all the worse for it i fear.

GrannieAnnie

Thank you for those answers. yes, it is sad that the health of the land is often forgotten.
My husband just finished reading a book called Collapse which covered the demise of various societies  around the world due often to poor land husbandry. Not an inconsequential act.
The handle on your recliner does not qualify as an exercise machine.

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