- Eventual Height: 60cm
- Eventual Spread: 45cm
Price Pruned
Second Early Potato - Potato British Queen
Potato British Queen
available to order from spring 2009
size: 2.5 kg bag
£7.99
add to wish list
We sell potatoes by weight but you can expect to receive about 30-32 tubers of this variety in a 2.5kg bag. All of our potatoes are certifed scottish seed potatoes ensuring crop quality.
- Position: sun-partial shade
- Soil: fertile, well drained
- Rate of growth: fast-growing
- Harvesting period: July
- Hardiness: protect tubers from frost
Recently awarded the Award of Garden Merit (AGM) by the Royal Horticultural Society. A second early with high yields and delicious flavour, ideal for general cooking - especially chipping, baking and roasting. Oval tubers with white skin, snowy white floury flesh and shallow eyes. Bred in Scotland in 1894 it quickly became Britain's most popular second early and provided part of the staple diet throughout the two World Wars. Yields for this heritage variety are surprisingly high.
Garden care: As soon as the potato tubers have been delivered you should unpack them and start the chitting (sprouting) process. Place them in single layer in a seed tray without compost and leave in a light, cool area protected from frost. This can be started about six weeks before you intend to plant them. Early varieties can be planted out under frost fleece protection, but the later varieties should be planted after the worst frosts have passed in your area - this is generally mid March to mid April. Dig a trench 8 - 13cm (3 - 5in) deep adding a general purpose fertiliser to the bottom of the trench. Plant the potato tubers in the trenches about 30cm (12in) apart, being careful not to knock the shoots off the tubers, and keeping the shoots facing upwards. Then lightly cover with soil. As the plants get to around 20cm (8in) tall you need to bank up the soil around the plant, so the soil covers the bottom two thirds of the plant. Watering your plants well will help improve crop yield and discourage potato scab.