Why grow your own potatoes?
Besides being very easy to grow in a
backyard garden or even containers, why should you grow potatoes?
How about the mind-boggling varieties you can plant? You can pick
from a huge variety of taters when you grow your own, with different
skin color, flesh color, texture, flavor and use.
Who needs boring
old Russet Potatoes or Yukon Golds when you can grow these
tantalizing varieties: Rose Finn Apple, Desiree, French Fingerling,
German Butterball, Russian Banana, Austrian Crescent, Red Bliss All
Blue, Purple Majesty... Is your mouth watering and imagination
running wild at these names?
Some varieties are better for fresh
eating (Red Gold, Rose Gold), some are better for long-time storage
(Russet, Carola), and whatever your growing and eating goals, I
encourage you to plant some of these tasty tubers!
You can even grow spuds if you don't
have a garden – just grow them in containers on a patio or
driveway!
When to plant?
Potatoes can be planted as soon as you
can work the soil in early spring, although they won't begin to grow
until the soil temperature has reached 45 degrees F.
We plant ours
two to four weeks before the last frost date. They can deal with a
light frost, since the soil will insulate them. However, if the
young leaves have popped through the soil and a hard frost threatens,
they can get damaged.
If a cold snap is forecast, you can push soil
or mulch like straw over them, and the leaves will grow back up
through it in a few days as if nothing happened.
How to plant them?
Start with certified seed potatoes to
make sure they are disease free, since these vegetables can suffer
from serious fungal and bacterial diseases. You can save some every
year and re-plant. But if after a while yields decline, or their
foliage looks weird, just start over again with new certified seed
potatoes.
Don't use old potatoes from your root cellar, since these
could carry disease organisms without you knowing it.
Plant seed potatoes whole if they are
small (about the size of a golf ball), or cut the bigger seed
potatoes in chunks (2 inches square), and make sure that each piece
has two or three buds, or eyes, on it.
Allow the potato chunks to
dry for a couple of days before planting so a callous can develop
over the cut, which helps prevent rotting.
Some people expose their seed potatoes
to light and temperatures between 60 to 70 degrees to encourage
sprouting a couple of weeks before they plant them. That way, they
take less time to mature and are less likely to rot. Make sure to
plant them when the sprouts are still less than one inch long.
Potatoes are very easy to grow. They
are pretty forgiving when it comes to soil conditions, but ideally
they like slightly acidic soil (PH of 5 to 7) and light, loose,
well-drained soil.
We practice crop rotation so they're
not grown in the same garden bed every year. It's best to wait four
years or more until you plant them in the same spot.
There are several ways to plant spuds.
The easiest way to plant them is 3
inches deep and 12 inches apart, then keep hilling, or just mulch
with compost or straw. Mulching helps keep soil cooler and moister,
which benefits potatoes and cuts down on watering and some pests.
Here's how we plant: We dig a trench
that is 8 inches deep and sprinkle organic pelletized fertilizer on it. Place each piece of potato with its cut side
down and eyes pointing up every 12 inches. Space the rows 3 feet
apart. Place 4 inches of soil on top of the potatoes. The plants
will begin to grow, and as they do, continue to fill the trench.
Eventually, we “hill” the potatoes, meaning we mound the soil
around the stems of the potato plants as they grow. This prevents
light from reaching the tubers. You don't want the potatoes exposed
to light, since this can make them turn green and produce solanine, a
mildly poisonous substance.
Some people don't even dig trenches,
but just loosen soil, throw the potatoes on top, then keep covering
and mulching them with straw. This way, they don't have to dig them
up later. However, you get less yield that way, and mice or voles
might have a field day in there, munching your crops!
Keep the plants well watered throughout
summer, especially while they are flowering, since this is when the
plants are creating their tubers. You want them to be happy so they
produce lots! 1 to 2 inches of water per week is ideal.
In late summer, foliage begins to turn
yellow and dies back. Stop watering then, since this will help your
taters cure in time for harvesting.
How to grow potatoes in containers:
You can plant
potatoes in large pots and just keep piling soil onto them as the
foliage grows. Or use commercial growing bags (constructed of heavy,
dense polypropylene), which is a great alternative on patios or
places where there's no good garden soil.
Put a few inches of soil
and compost in the bottom of the bag, plant three or four seed
potatoes, then cover with three inches of soil. Keep adding soil as
the plants grow until the bag is full.
When harvest time comes, just
dump the bag on its side and grab the potatoes. Make sure you water
adequately and deeply enough throughout the growing season!
Some people even
just use a large plastic garbage bag for this, punched through with a
few holes for drainage.
You could also use
hardware cloth with 1/4-inch mesh, or chicken wire, to build these
potato towers. Make them into a cylinder about 18 inches in diameter
and 24 inches tall. Follow the planting and growing procedure above,
and then just lift the cylinder when harvest time arrives.
When and how to harvest
Let's talk about harvesting – our
favorite stage of the whole growing process!
Digging up potatoes is
like a treasure hunt, and I usually invite my kids and their friends
to help with this fun activity. Use a garden fork or shovel to dig,
but be careful when you dig spuds: its easy to spear them.
Make sure
you get every single one, otherwise they'll overwinter and pop us as
“volunteers” the next spring, which will mess up your crop
rotation.
You can stick your hand in the soil and
sneak baby potatoes 2 or 3 weeks after the plants have finished
flowering.
If you want to keep them for storage,
wait until they are fully cured, typically 2 to 3 weeks after the
foliage has died back.
One trick to tell if your potatoes are
ready for harvest is to dig one up, rub your thumb hard on the
potato, and if the skin rubs off easily, they are too young to store.
Potatoes with a thicker, tougher skin that won't rub off will last
the longest in storage.
If the weather is dry, we leave the
potatoes on the ground for a few hours to dry off. Some people leave
them in the field for up to three days to cure them. I don't like
leaving them exposed to light for so long, so I just make sure they
are dry before I store them.
If you harvest in wet weather, allow
the potatoes to cure in a dry, protected area, like a garage or
covered porch. Curing for a few days allows the skins to mature,
which helps with long storage.
How to store:
We store our potatoes in cardboard
boxes in our dark crawl space, which is like a root cellar. They
need to be stored in a well-ventilated, dark and cool place that's
between 35 and 40 degrees F. Stored in this manner, we often eat our
own potatoes until it's time to plant the next crop in spring.
How much to plant:
A single potato plant yields 2 to 5
pounds of potatoes, so you should plant 10 to 15 plants per person.
5 to 8 pounds of seed potatoes will plant a 100 feet row. You can
grow 60 pounds (1 bushel) from a 30-foot row.
Now it's your turn: Tell me if you grow your own potatoes, what your favorites are, and when you plant them!