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Grow Your Own / Charlott potatoes growing everywhere
« Last post by Sleepingpopman on Yesterday at 21:57 »
Hi Everyone.
I've been growing potatoes for many years but never had this happen before. I set 2 rows of 8 Charlott's at the end of March, covered them in fleece, I could see them coming up, 1 row has come up as a row which I've hilled up :) the other has come up all over the place nowhere near a row :( I know they don't always come up in a straight line but they are usually in a rough looking row, this is nowhere near, this 1 row covers the area of 2+ rows  ??? My question is. Can I just put a thick layer of compost over the whole area. I realize digging them up is going to be interesting. Any thoughts or suggestions. I did'nt grow potatoes there last year. ;)
Keith.
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Grow Your Own / Re: Curly leaf garlic
« Last post by Snow on Yesterday at 19:21 »
Excess nitrogen can cause garlic to do some weird things too. Bit strange it's just that variety though

I'm growing 6 varieties and one is doing a lot worse than the others, I'm hoping its because it's a particularly late variety and it'll take off in the coming months.
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Grow Your Own / Re: Potato Failure..
« Last post by Snow on Yesterday at 19:16 »
I just grow first or second earlies and put them in when the ground is warm enough, checking from the equinox. It was warm enough by the second week of march thanks to the mild winter I suppose (8.5c recorded 4 inches down), I put them in on the 23rd. We could potentially get frosts into may and I just mulch the shoots and cover with cardboard and cloche if frost threatens, which it did this year end of April. Last year we had a -3c that killed the shoots end of April as I couldn't get out to cover them. It did put them back a few weeks


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Grow Your Own / Re: Dog eating manure
« Last post by Subversive_plot on Yesterday at 18:50 »
Back in my consulting days, there was a facility in the Caribbean that I worked with that disposed sludge that came from a wastewater plant at a tuna processing facility.  Nasty-smelling stuff!  The healthiest dog that I ever saw at that facility routinely ate sludge that dripped here and there from the truck!

While I never would want a dog I owned to eat that, my point is, a dog's constitution is usually pretty durable. I definitely agree with Nobbie!
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Grow Your Own / Re: Dog eating manure
« Last post by Nobbie on Yesterday at 17:52 »
A lot of dogs eat fresh manure with no ill effects. Mine eats sheep, rabbit and horse when it gets the chance. I’d check the bag to see if there is anything added to make the granules, but doubt there anything to worry about now that the dog’s been sick.
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Chatting on the Plot / Re: WORDLE
« Last post by mumofstig on Yesterday at 17:45 »
5 for me  ::)
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Chatting on the Plot / Re: WORDLE
« Last post by MrsPea on Yesterday at 15:42 »
 That was hard going 4 today  :)
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 its turned chilly, no like it  >:(
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Chatting on the Plot / Re: What’s for tea? 2024
« Last post by MrsPea on Yesterday at 15:28 »
 sausages bacon medalions egg bake beans tom for me may be a slice of seeded bread toasted, yoghurt for pud
  :D
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Grow Your Own / Dog eating manure
« Last post by Anton on Yesterday at 15:07 »
Advice please. I was spreading some manure granules around my vegetables yesterday, some of which had clumped together because of rain infiltrating the bag. I went to put the bag away and then noticed our border collie was  chewing something where I had thrown some granules and a couple of clumps. I shooed the dog away but it must have eaten something because it vomited when we got back to the house. After that the animal seemed perfectly normal, eat its meal and went for a walk with me with no signs of problems.

Could the manure be toxic and have any long-term effects?

Anton
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