Ashford Allotments
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Dare I plant my potatoes this early?

21/2/2015

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Bill is famous for doing everything two weeks before the books say. He usually gets away with it, and often has the earliest crops on the site. Whatever the books say, if you fancy getting your seed potatoes in during the last week in February, the risk may well pay off.

Kent does get late frosts - however they are rarer here than, say, in the Midlands or East Anglia, so the risk is less. Have some sacking, old newspaper, net curtains - whatever, although I should remind you that the Trading Store sells Crop Protection fleece very cheap! - ready as the leaves emerge, and keep your eye on the weather forecast. A light covering is all it needs to protect young leaves from scorching. Even a 'ground frost' later in spring, which may blacken the tips of the leaves, does not do any serious damage.

You do not need to 'chit' seed potatoes before planting. We lay seed potatoes out in a light, frost-fee place so they don't produce long fragile shoots in the interval between buying them and planting them. Chitting doesn't speed up the crop and you can plant seed potatoes straight away without doing it.

For more on growing potatoes locally click here to go to our advice page.
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Don't mess up your soil structure!

20/2/2015

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The majority of allotment sites in Ashford are on clay soils. On these heavy, often wet soils, it is a constant struggle to try to get the soil as light and fluffy as possible.

It's also vital to avoid, whenever possible, squashing the soil down again after you've dug and forked it. Even after this relatively dry winter, the water table is high and the lower layers of soil wet. Once squashed down by heavy boots, the soil becomes an airless, Plasticene-like squidge. Roots like air round them as well as water and soil - in airless conditions the fine roots of many types of veg just die, and the crop is either poor or fails altogether.
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    Kent's climate is drier, hotter and has a longer growing season than the average for the UK. Advice in gardening books may not fit Kent. This blog has local tips on what will grow and when to do garden jobs.

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