Loading... Please wait...

Our Newsletter


Sort by:

Seed Potatoes

Unable to send to WA or SA due to Quarantine restrictions.

Please Note: we are unable to send seed potatoes to the following areas of NSW;

NSW Seed Potato Protected Areas - Armidale, Bathurst, Blayney, Cabonne, Crookwell, Evans, Glen Innes, Goulburn, Gunning, Mulwaree, Oberon, Orange, Severn, Walcha and Wingecarribee (Parish of Murrimba).

Our full range of Seed Potatoes will be available from mid-May.

Do you want to grow your own chemical free potatoes? Most commercial potato crops have been grown with the extensive use of chemicals and pesticides. Imagine harvesting your own freshly dug spuds, safe in the knowledge they are grown from certified Generation 4 seed potatoes sourced from Scottsdale, Tasmania.

Choose from  old fashioned favourites such as Tasmanian Pinkeyes, Nicola, Pontiac or Dutch Cream. Or alternatively, try a collection which contains all of these varieties. Why not try our new Gourmet range of certified seed potatoes sourced from Harvest Moon. This range contains spuds especially developed for salad, roasting, baking, mashing... Royal Blue is a delicious purple skinned variety which has the creamiest texture and is very versatile too. Salad Rose is a firm, waxy pink skinned type which lends itself to potato salads, baking whole, and roasting. Check out a full range from Mid- May onward, when we will also have a selection of pre-mixed packs available.

Just because you don't have much space doesn't mean you can't grow your own potatoes! Try this idea:

Dig over an area of your garden, enriching with compost. Make a cylinder with chicken wire, and hold in place with star 4-5 pickets banged securely into the  pre-prepared ground. This circular growing area can be as large or as small as you like (mine worked well when it was about 1 metre across). Plant 5-8 seed potatoes (or as many as your space will allow) and cover them with straw, hay, compost or well - rotted manure. Keep adding more straw as the plant grows, so that only the growing tips of the potato are visible. Keep doing this to about 1 metre high and when the leaves die down, remov the chicken wire and harvest your spuds!!