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Does anyone on my flist know much about growing potatoes? I am growing two potato plants in hopes of having new potatoes. One of them is now well over a metre tall. The other one would be, but it broke in a recent rain storm and is only about three quarters of a metre tall now. They are both flowering. When do I look for baby potatoes? I don't want big potatoes. I want little, bitty, yummy, new potatoes.

How about snow peas? My seed envelope says that they take 68 days to mature and that they like cool weather. They can be planted in early spring or late summer. If I planted them the 1st of August, they would mature in early October. Does that sound reasonable. What is a good time to be planting these in Greater Montreal? Is there a range of time that is good for the fall planting, so I can have them mature at different times? Do I want them to mature at different times?

Date: 2008-07-24 11:25 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] mousme.livejournal.com
Jan and I have been growing potatoes this year. I believe you can start "exploring" for baby potatoes a couple of weeks after they've flowered. I'd recommend sending Jan an email: she's been more on top of the produce... err... production this year than I have.

Date: 2008-07-24 11:59 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] ai731.livejournal.com
Well, a couple of weeks after they flowered, the potatoes were the size of a large marble. Now they've gone to seed (actually, they did this at least 3 weeks ago - the seeds are these big green balls, very cool) and the potatoes are the size of golf balls. I'm leaving mine for another 3 weeks or so before I pull them up, I think. If you have 'hilled' or 'ridged' up your potatoes, then you can gently dig into the side of a hill until you find a potato, and then gently dig around it to find out how big it is, and then cover it back up if it's still smaller than you want.

As for the peas, August 1st would probably be a very good time to plant them for fall eating. I planted mine in early spring, but our resident groundhog ate the tops off the plants, so I only ever got a half-dozen peas. If you plant a bunch and pick the peas as they grow, more will grow until the plants get killed by hard frost, so I wouldn't worry too much about them all maturing at the same time.

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