Tag: potatoes

  • How to Grow Potatoes – GF Video

    How to Grow Potatoes – GF Video

    Learn to grow potatoes in this video, and in the following videos we show how to hill potatoes and how to harvest them. Growing potatoes is not hard, but there are a few terms you need to be familiar with. We’ll go through them below.

    How to grow potatoes – step by step

    Potatoes are best grown from what are called seed potatoes. At first, I didn’t know what that was, then I realized seed potatoes are just like regular potatoes, but they have gone to seed, in a way. They usually have little sprouts coming out of them, kinda like flowers or vegetables that have gone to seed. Hence the term seed potato. One big difference that you may want to look for is what’s called certified seed potatoes. This means they have gone through some sort of inspection process to be certified free of disease.

    how to grow potatoes

    Seed potatoes can also be some potatoes you find in the back of your vegetable drawer that have started to sprout. Yes, you can grow these. They may not grow out to be amazing, but they will probably work. Many people find potatoes growing in their compost pile, because they tossed some old potatoes in there. And then you know what’s going to happen.

    potato videos insert

    Some people will cut a seed potato into two or more pieces. I do. You want at least two ‘eyes’ or sprouts on each piece you carve. You can either plant these directly or allow the cuts to dry overnight.

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    how to grow potatoes

    Potatoes are usually grown in a trench, or if you are using a raised bed like we do, you would remove some of the soil in the bed. This is to prepare for hilling the potatoes. Plant the potatoes 6″ below the soil level in the trench, with most of the potato eyes pointed up.

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    Cover the seed potatoes and water them in. They will take a week or so to pop up out of the soil.

    This is the first of our how to grow and harvest potatoes video series. Watch the next video here:

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  • Super Seed Potatoes, Growing in the Garden

    Super Seed Potatoes, Growing in the Garden

    Last fall I helped a neighbor dig a bunch of potatoes, and we were given a few bushel baskets of potatoes for our efforts. The potatoes were pretty darn simple to harvest, as the garden soil was nice and loamy, it dug easily with a garden fork. The hardest part was not hitting the potatoes with the fork, there were so many of them.

    I took our part of the potato harvest and put it in bushel baskets in the basement. I didn’t clean or was the potatoes before storing them, I think its best to leave them caked in dirt for the winter. Pretty neat to be able to walk into the basement to pull our of a basket some dinner.

    It ended up we didn’t eat all the potatoes we had harvested, and this spring, I noticed pale sprouts coming out of the bushel basket, aiming for the basement window.

    Found this in the basement..

    I wasn’t sure what to do with the sprouting potatoes, as I hadn’t planned on growing potatoes this year. Last time we grew them, we had the Colorado Potato Beetle Invasion, watch the video here. Then this weekend I decided to put them in the garden. If you’re wondering how to plant potatoes, its not rocket science, and potatoes are pretty forgiving, which is a good thing, considering I’m the one planting them.

    The potatoes had become a tangled mass of sprouted seed potatoes, a giant ball of roots, potatoes, and sprouts.

    I dug out part of one of our raised beds, added some time release fertilizer and azomite, a rock powder, and gently planted the seed potatoes.

    laying them in the bottom of a raised bed

    As I covered the seed potatoes with dirt and leaf mulch, I tried my best to get the potato  sprouts to point up thru the soil.

    gently covering the potatoes

    Not sure what’s going to happen, but I think the potatoes i planted will be good. I’ll mound the potatoes once or twice with mulch  or some straw or other compost like material, and I’ll work on the Potato Beetle problem.

    We made a GardenFork.TV video about how to hill your potatoes, its the first one we shot with Henry, one of our Yellow Labradors, when she was a puppy. Its fun to watch.

    What do you think is the best way to plant potatoes? Let us know below: