Showing posts with label Sweet Potatoes. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sweet Potatoes. Show all posts

Monday, 17 August 2020

A Quick Whiz Around The Back Garden

 
Due to shielding my wife, the back garden including the patio was taken over to grow Tomatoes, Sweet Potatoes, Mint and Potatoes. I've had a few harvests already but though perhaps I should take some photos before it's all over so lets have a quick whiz around the back garden 


The Quadgrow has performed magnificently on the patio and I'm so looking forward to getting this installed in the new greenhouse on the plot next year. 


The next Gigantimo tomato turning red, not quite as large as my first picking 


The Bio Green Tower 



The Gigantimo tomatoes in the Bio Green City Jungle are growing well, the plant really needs a trim and tidy up now so that the large tomatoes that are on it can max out. This is another reason I took the photos before the plants get their next hair cut. 


I have now harvest four punnets of tomatoes from these plants 


There are a few more punnets to be had, I'm keeping an eye to see if any splitting is occurring and if I spot it then I will harvest them to prevent losses  


The mini and micro tomatoes in the Space Saver Greenhouse  are doing well and I will soon be harvesting these as well.  Two Buckets of new potatoes have been harvested and consumed and the next two buckets will be harvested during this week when the rain stops.

Thursday, 2 July 2020

Quick Wizz Around The Back Garden




Potatoes and Tomato plant looking good with green toms now showing



Quadgrows 

Left Quadgrow

Right Quadgrow

Bio Green Tomato Pot & Tower


Elho Tomato Pot after remedial works with Bamboo canes 

Agapanthus & Mint Plant 

Gigantomo in the Bio Green City Jungle only flowers at the moment

Excess Mini & Micro Toms on the Table 

The have green tomatoes & more flowers 

Micro Tom in the Space Saver Greenhouse 


Thursday, 28 May 2020

City Jungle Trellis & Sweet Potatoes


Gigantomo Tomato and Trellis added to the Bio Green City Jungle, it took quite some time to fill up the water reservoir but the level indicator in the front left corner is so useful showing you the progress and when you are going to need to top up the water. I'm going to put a cucumber plant either side of the planter so they can grow up the trellis.   


The Treasure Island Sweet Potato collection arrived today from Thompson & Morgan and there were in excellent condition unlike a number of plug plants that fellow gardeners on Facebook have been sharing recently. I think people forget that Saturday deliveries have been stopped in most areas because of a reduction in staff and a backlog of mail. During these times they need to give Thompson & Morgan a little latitude.  


The patio garden is not looking bad considering that SWMBO informed me I was not allowed to turn the patio into a substitute allotment plot whilst we are shielding her and I can't get to my plot. 

It was really useful that I had the Quadgrow, Elho Tomato Panter, Bio Green Maxitom & Bio Green City Jungle at home and had not taken them to the allotment before self isolating & lockdown started #IsolatedGardeners 

I have a long article and review of the Quadgrow planned, It was near completion when I had a hard disk failure so I'm having to re create it for posting next month, so keep an eye out or use this link to find all information re the Quadgrow  

The timber decking tiles really need replacing unfortunately they no longer sell the diagonal ones and I have already replaced those that were at the end of their life with the parallel to edge in the middle that are at least the same size on plan.


Eight flower buckets of first early spuds are doing well on the left and the rest of the flower buckets have two dwarf or mini. micro tomatoes in them apart from the two buckets in front of the broken fencing trellis which will have cucumbers planted in them.  

Friday, 31 January 2020

Sweet Potato Edible and Ornamental Trio



I received a News Update from Thompson & Morgan revealing their Top 10 new additions of the best plant introductions launched in the their 2020 Spring Catalogue.

No 1 to 8 are all flowers and as much as I like flowers on the allotment I like to grow things I can eat

No 10 is the Low in carbs and high in fibre NEW Winter Squash Potatoes Duo that I blogged about in October and then again in December last year

No 9 is Pretty and tasty NEW Sweet Potato Edible and Ornamental Trio
- Colourful and tasty sweet potatoes
- High in antioxidants
- Heavy cropping for great results
Compact varieties are perfect for growing in large patio pots. Our photos show how pretty these ornamental sweet potatoes are, but you'll have to taste them to believe their flavour. Heavy yields mean you'll be surprised at harvest time too. Perfect additions to sunny borders, their compact growth makes them ideal for large patio pots too. The trio includes Tahiti, Tatakoto and Makatea.
TT. 20cm (8in). Harvest: Sept-Oct. Full sun.
Now sweet potatoes are something I like to eat, but something I have not tried growing in the past. My bother-in-law had a try a few years ago from slips and didn’t get a very good yield form what he planted and concluded that for him the cost was prohibitive and he didn’t try them again.

However a few years on and Thompson & Morgan are selling plants not slips at less than half price, so it has to be worth a go.

3 x 105mm potted sweet potato plants for £9.99 saving £10.98
6 x 105mm potted sweet potato plants for £17.99 saving £23.95

Delivery by the end of May 2020

They are also potted and not slips. The web site does not make it clear if all 3 are in one pot or in separate pots and if so what size or if it’s a bulb of soil in plastic, so it’s going to be interesting to see what arrives when it arrives and I will photograph the condition they arrive in and post to the blog for your information.  

Information from Thompson & Morgan’s Sweet Potato Edible and Ornamental Trio page

Description

The Treasure Island Series comes from an innovative breeding programme producing Sweet Potato plants as ornamental edibles. The attractive foliage can be harvested as nutritious salad leaves until early autumn when the plants are lifted for their crop of delicious tubers.

This was something I didn’t know about sweet potatoes

These compact plants look equally at home on the patio as they are in the vegetable plot, making superb foliage plants throughout the summer. Height and spread: 1.5m (59").
Sweet Potato Trio comprises:

Sweet Potato 'Makatea' - Bright green, heart-shaped foliage and orange-flushed tubers in autumn.

Sweet Potato 'Tahiti' – A striking variety with eye-catching dark purple tubers.

Sweet Potato 'Tatakoto' – A winning combination of Ivy-shaped foliage with purple-skinned, orange-fleshed tubers.

How To Grow

Gradually acclimatise sweet potato plants to outdoor conditions over 7-10 days prior to planting directly outside once all risk of frost has passed. Sweet potatoes require high temperatures of 24-26°C (74-78°F).

Planting them through black plastic will provide extra warmth in cooler climates. When growing sweet potato in particularly cold areas they are best grown in greenhouse borders or under cloches.

Plant sweet potatoes 30cm (12") apart, leaving 75cm (30") between rows. Grow sweet potatoes in rich fertile, light sandy well drained soil. They prefer an acid or neutral soil in full sun. Prepare the soil in early spring by adding plenty of well-rotted manure or garden compost to the soil to improve its structure and fertility. Water generously after planting.

More Info

Water sweet potato plants regularly and hoe between plants to prevent weeds from establishing. Provide a thick mulch of organic matter around the base of the plants to help conserve moisture and reduce weed growth. Spread the stems out around the plant and cut back to the growing tips to encourage more lateral stems to develop. Harvest sweet potatoes in late summer approximately 12 to 16 weeks after planting, when the foliage begins to turn yellow and die back.

Culinary note: Culinary uses of sweet potato are similar to potatoes - boil, steam, bake, fry, mash or batter fry as 'tempura'. The leaves and tips of young shoots can be cooked as a spinach substitute.


I found additional information on the Thompson & Morgan web site on How to grow sweet potatoes in the UK. It’s very informative and expands on the information found on the Sweet Potato Trio (Treasure Island Series) web page