🥔 Chitting Potatoes: Signs They’re Ready to Plant

🌱 Introduction: Knowing When to Stop Waiting

One of the most important (and often overlooked) parts of chitting is knowing when to stop. Potatoes don’t need long shoots to be ready—in fact, waiting too long can cause problems.

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This guide explains the clear signs your chitted potatoes are ready to plant, what perfect chits look like, and what to do if conditions outside aren’t quite right yet.

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✅ The Key Signs Potatoes Are Ready to Plant

🌱 1. Shoots Are Short and Sturdy

This is the biggest indicator.

Ideal chits are:

  • 1–3 cm long
  • Thick and firm
  • Upright, not floppy

Longer shoots are more likely to snap and don’t give extra benefit.


🎨 2. Shoots Have Good Colour

Healthy chits are:

  • Green or purple
  • Sometimes slightly hairy
  • Not pale, white, or yellow

Colour shows the shoots have grown in good light and are strong.


🥔 3. Only a Few Strong Shoots Per Potato

You’re aiming for:

  • 1–3 strong shoots per seed potato

Lots of thin shoots can mean weaker plants and smaller tubers.


🌡️ 4. Outdoor Conditions Are Suitable

Potatoes are ready to plant when:

  • Soil is workable, not waterlogged
  • Frost risk is reducing
  • Ground temperature is improving

If soil is still cold and wet, it’s better to wait—even if chits are ready.


📅 5. You’re Within the Right Planting Window

Typical UK planting times:

  • First earlies: Late March–early April
  • Second earlies: Early–mid April
  • Maincrop: Mid–late April

Match readiness to realistic planting dates, not the calendar alone.


🚫 Signs Potatoes Are Past Their Best

Watch out for:

  • Shoots longer than 3–4 cm
  • Thin, tangled growth
  • Shoots snapping easily
  • Potatoes becoming shrivelled

These signs mean chitting has gone on too long or conditions were too warm.


🌱 What If Chits Are Ready but You Can’t Plant Yet?

This happens often in the UK.

If soil isn’t ready:

  • Move potatoes to a cooler, bright spot
  • Slow growth by lowering temperature
  • Avoid handling to prevent damage

Do not rub off healthy shoots just to “reset” them.


🌱 Can You Plant With Very Small Chits?

Yes.

Even:

  • Tiny visible chits
  • Just-swollen eyes

…are perfectly plantable, especially for maincrop potatoes.

Short chits are always better than overgrown ones.


🧠 Quick Readiness Checklist

Your potatoes are ready to plant if:

  • ✔ Shoots are 1–3 cm long
  • ✔ Chits are thick and coloured
  • ✔ There are only a few strong shoots
  • ✔ Soil is workable and warming

If all four are true—you’re good to go.


🧠 Key Takeaway

Potatoes are ready to plant much sooner than many gardeners realise. Short, sturdy, well-coloured chits combined with workable soil are the real signs to look for—not long shoots or a fixed calendar date.

When it comes to chitting success:
Plant on strength, not length.


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