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Home growing and harvesting your own potatoes is easy and healthy.
Between the economic slump and the expensive prices of organically grown vegetables, home grown crops are once again becoming popular. Growing potatoes in your own backyard is not only easy and healthy for families, but vegetable growers swear by the fresh flavor of a home grown crop. Potatoes (Solanum tuberosum) are native to the Andes Mountains and the Chilean coast. They thrive in the northern United States and southern Canada due to the cool weather. Potatoes are nutritious, versatile, and have been a staple in many cultures for centuries. A whopping eighty pounds of potatoes can be produced from ten square feet of garden space. That’s a lot of fresh food. Below is the easy way of growing potatoes. Start With:
How to Plant PotatoesSeed potatoes can be planted whole, or they can be cut into chunks called “sets”. The chunks of potatoes need to have 2-3 eyes on them. Let sets air out for a day or two so the cut areas dry slightly before planting. If sets are planted, as opposed to the whole seed potato, they need to be placed cut side down into the ground.
* When the tubers are exposed to sun, the potatoes turn green and may develop solanine (a slightly toxic alkaloid). When to Plant Potatoes
When to Harvest PotatoesWhen plants begin to blossom, stop hilling the soil over the tubers. Mulch can be applied to help retain moisture and keep the crop watered. Harvest potatoes when they are young for the best flavor.
Potato Cultivars
Planting and harvesting potatoes is easy and rewarding. Plus, when grown in your own backyard, potatoes are never healthier or tastier. Interested in more easy way to plant potatoes? Check out The Benefits of Growing Potatoes in Containers.
The copyright of the article How to Plant Potatoes the Easy Way in Vegetable Gardens is owned by Chris McLaughlin. Permission to republish How to Plant Potatoes the Easy Way in print or online must be granted by the author in writing.
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Jan 11, 2009 6:16 PM
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