🥔 Chitting Potatoes in Greenhouses
🌱 Introduction: Is a Greenhouse a Good Place to Chit Potatoes?
Using a greenhouse to chit potatoes can work very well—but only if it’s managed correctly. Greenhouses provide excellent light, which is essential for strong chits, but they can also warm up quickly and create problems if temperatures aren’t controlled.
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This guide explains when chitting potatoes in a greenhouse works, when it doesn’t, and how to get the best results in UK conditions.
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🌤️ Why Greenhouses Can Be Ideal for Chitting
A greenhouse offers two big advantages:
- Excellent natural light – keeps shoots short and strong
- Good airflow (when ventilated) – reduces weak growth
Used properly, a greenhouse can produce compact, sturdy chits that handle planting out easily.
🌡️ The Key Risk: Too Much Heat
The biggest mistake when chitting potatoes in a greenhouse is excess warmth.
Problems occur when:
- Daytime temperatures rise above 12–15°C
- Sunlight causes rapid temperature swings
- Greenhouses are closed on bright days
Too much heat leads to:
- Long, weak shoots
- Brittle chits
- Growth that’s hard to control
A greenhouse must stay cool, not warm.
✅ Best Conditions for Chitting in a Greenhouse
To chit successfully in a greenhouse, aim for:
- Temperature: Ideally 5–10°C
- Light: Bright but indirect is fine
- Ventilation: Regular airflow on mild days
- Protection: Frost-free at night
Unheated greenhouses are usually better than heated ones.
🕰️ Best Time to Chit Potatoes in a Greenhouse (UK)
Greenhouses work best for chitting when:
- Late January–February for first earlies
- February for second earlies
- Late February–early March for maincrop (optional)
Earlier than this, light levels and temperature stability are harder to manage.
📦 How to Set Potatoes Up in a Greenhouse
- Place seed potatoes rose end up
- Use egg boxes, seed trays, or shallow boxes
- Space potatoes so shoots don’t tangle
- Place trays off the ground (bench or shelf)
Do not water or cover them.
❄️ Frost Protection Is Essential
Greenhouses can drop below freezing overnight.
Protect chitting potatoes by:
- Moving trays closer to the house wall
- Using horticultural fleece on cold nights
- Avoiding contact with cold glass
Frost damages chits and can halt growth.
🚫 Common Greenhouse Chitting Mistakes
- ❌ Leaving doors closed on sunny days
- ❌ Chitting in heated greenhouses
- ❌ Letting temperatures swing wildly
- ❌ Starting too early and waiting weeks to plant
Consistency matters more than speed.
🌱 What Good Greenhouse-Grown Chits Look Like
By planting time, aim for:
- Short, thick shoots (1–3 cm)
- Green or purple colouring
- Firm, upright growth
- Usually 1–3 chits per tuber
These handle outdoor planting far better than long shoots.
🧠 Is a Greenhouse Better Than Indoors?
Sometimes.
A greenhouse is often better than indoors if:
- Your home is very warm
- You have good ventilation control
- The greenhouse is frost-free
Indoors is often better if:
- The greenhouse overheats easily
- Frost protection is difficult
Choose the most stable, cool, bright option you have.
🧠 Key Takeaway
Chitting potatoes in a greenhouse works extremely well when temperatures are kept cool and steady. Light levels are excellent, but heat and frost must be managed carefully. If you can keep your greenhouse between 5–10°C, ventilate regularly, and protect from frost, it’s one of the best places to produce strong, planting-ready chits.