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Spud Tubs from £9.95
GDN-725
Spud Tubs
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Spud Tubs
Spud Tubs - Grow potatoes on your patio or anywhere space is limited with these easily assembled Spud Tubs, simply unclip the spud tub to gather up your crop of potatoes then roll up and store when not in use, spud tubs comes complete with 3 ground pegs.
Extra Value Set of 3 Save £2.50

• The polypropylene ‘tub’ is simply slotted together, then filled with soil and your choice of crop
• At harvest time, simply unclip the ‘tub’ to gather your crop
• Suitable for many vegetables or plants other than potatoes
• The polypropylene is unaffected by domestic detergents, so can be easily sterilised.
• Roll up and store flat when not in use.
• Measures 60cm in height by 40cm diameter
• Supplied complete with three ground pegs
• Try for a bumper crop of one type of plant or vegetable, or grow a variety of produce

Extra Value Set of 3 Save £2.50


"The spud tubs are brilliant and you are the most competitively priced, they work a treat when limited for space. Yours an extremely pleased customer."
- Many thanks, Debra Ainscough
"These new spud tubs are perfect when space is limited but your appetite for home grown potatoes is not. Click the flat pack sides together to construct the tub, then unclick them at harvest time and roll them up for easy storage until they’re next needed."
- Gardeners World, May 2007


Here’s a list of the key elements to producing a potato crop from the Spud Tubs;

SOIL AND POSITION

In beds, potatoes need deep, fertile soil with a PH of 5-6. In Spud Tubs or containers, use a mix of rotted compost, manure and good garden soil and place in a sheltered, sunny position.

 

WHEN TO PLANT

First early potato varieties can be planted in February and all other types from March onwards. Tubers should not be planted any later than late May. Many gardeners like to ‘chit’, or sprout, their potatoes before planting – place the tubers in a cool frost free place with natural light until the chits reach about 2.5cm (1”) in length.

 

PLANTING DEPTH

10 - 15cm – leave room to earth up as potatoes develop, as exposure to sunlight will turn new tubers green and poisonous. Simply draw soil up around the stem as it grows, or add around 10cm of compost when the plants are around 15cm tall. Plant no more than 3 tubers per Spud Tub.

 

FERTILISER

Apply a high potash fertiliser either when, or shortly after, planting and ensure the potato tubers do not come into direct contact with the fertiliser granules.

 

WATER

Heavy watering when the new tubers reach the size of marbles should result in a higher yield. It’s especially important to make sure the soil in spud tubs and containers is kept moist as it can very quickly dry out.

 

HARVESTING AND STORAGE

Depending on the variety, potatoes take the following time to reach maturity;

 

Type

Plant to Harvest Time

First Early

10 weeks

Second Early

13 weeks

Early Maincrop

15 weeks

Late Maincrop

20 weeks



 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Potatoes which are left in the soil longer than the above periods will become larger, but are also more susceptible to slug attack. Dig up the potatoes in dry conditions, leave on the soil to dry and then store in boxes or Hessian sacks, NOT polythene – this causes the stored tubers to rot.

 

This is by no means a definitive account of how to grow potatoes, but will hopefully prove to be of help!