Yukon Gold Potatoes in Burlap Sacks

There is so much out there about how to grow potatoes, increase yields by continually burying the stems, and how fantastic they taste compared to store-bought.  The most important thing I’ve learned is that not every variety of potato will benefit from periodic hilling with additional dirt to increase yields.

I chose to grow my favorite, Yukon Gold, which is a determinate variety.  This means that, once the plant emerges from the growing medium, it will produce tubers below that soil line.  All the hilling in the world won’t get you more potatoes, and it might even increase the chance of stem rot.  The only caveat to this is if you start to see potatoes, make sure to cover those up so they don’t come in green and inedible.

I bought one box of seed potatoes from the local Ace Hardware store for $4.  They might have been there for a while, as you can see–they had already started chitting and producing alien tentacle-like sprouts.  For those with more than 2 chits per potato, I cut them in half and let them dry on paper towels for a day.  I shared about 6 pieces with a friend and still ended up with enough to make 4 sacks of potatoes.

seedpotatoes

Because I started them indoors in mid-March, they had a good head start when they went out into the garden in early April.  I filled each burlap sack with about 6″ of 1:1 top soil and garden soil with Miracle Gro in it, put 3 pieces of potato in each, then topped them with another 6″ of soil.  They need regular watering, so I go out with the hose on days when it hasn’t rained.

Three weeks later, they are thriving propped up against the straw bales I’m conditioning for the melons… but more on that this weekend!

potatoes

Welcome!

This is Charlie.  As you can see, he appreciates flowers, sunshine, and being outside in general.

CharlieandFlower

Thank you for checking out what’s growing in Charlie’s garden this year–we’ll be sharing planting techniques for backyard gardeners, container gardening, and recipes for the produce we manage to grow.