Our journey to producing more and consuming less on 1/8 acre in the middle of the city. Urban farming, through keeping backyard chickens and a top bar hive of honey bees, practicing organic vegetable gardening, taking care of several fruit trees, maintaining a compost pile, canning and preserving our harvests and trying our best to do it all ourselves using reclaimed materials where possible.
Monday, October 21, 2013
2013 Potato Harvest
11 comments:
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Nope....they did the same here. I was thinking the same way you are--forget it, I give up, no potatoes for us. But the truth is is that they are a calorie dense food, and can be stored easily. They are really worth it, for the food value, as long as I can get them to grow properly. I'll let you know if I figure it out! :)
ReplyDeleteDid not grow potatoes this year, lacking space. A few bloggers grow potatoes in containers so am planning to do so next year.
ReplyDeleteSo sorry about your results. Next year I was planning to try them; now I'm having second thoughts!
ReplyDeleteThe method for growing sweet potatoes is to remove the sprouts from the potato and plant the sprouts about a foot apart in well loosened soil. The sprouts root easily. If your 'mother' sweet potato wasn't locally grown the variety may not be well suited for your area. And my recent post on my sweet potato harvest shows timing matters.
ReplyDeleteSorry about your potatoes! Financially I've found that it's best to buy the basics at the local ag store where seed potatoes are much cheaper (but you don't get much choice of variety). Mine failed this year too, because they had blight and most of them rotted within a week of harvest. It was heart-breaking!
ReplyDeleteI can no longer eat potatoes, due to allergies, but I'm very interested in growing sweet potatoes.
ReplyDeleteI harvested 73 pounds of potatoes from 5 pounds of seed. The weights would have been greater, but I tend to dig a lot of "new" potatoes (I can buy "old potatoes at the grocery store). I don't even bother with hilling any more, just plant my seed potatoes 9" deep and 12" apart in soil that was amended with composted cow manure at the end of the previous growing season. I do add 2-3 inches of chopped leaf mulch as they grow, as we get such hot weather that dries our soil quickly. I never pick off blossoms, I tend to just plant, water and forget....they do their own thing without my help. I also plant just the old stand by varieties every year, Red Norland, Yukon Gold and sometimes Russets (not my favorite, but best for French fries and good for storage).
ReplyDeleteYou have some sort of potato genius ability though....
DeleteWell, your potato experience is about the same as mine, so I don't grow them anymore either. They are not one of my favorite foods so it's not a big deal, although my husband would love some homegrown spuds.
ReplyDeleteI don't grow potatoes anymore since I'm sensitive to all the nightshade crops (sadly). Too bad about the lack of yield. And I hope you find more sweet potatoes under the ground. I've really grown fond of them after growing them for the first time last year.
ReplyDeleteI love growing potatoes! I have them tucked all over the garden and flower beds. I find them super easy to grow...just plant them and walk away!
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