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  2. How to Make a Potato Barrel - Dave's Garden

    davesgarden.com/guides/articles/how-to-make-a-potato-barrel

    Repeat this process until the barrel is full, adding fewer potatoes towards the top if you feel that the barrel is getting too crowded. Water and Care for Potatoes Until They Wither . You’ll want to keep the soil damp but not too wet throughout the growing season — which happens to pretty long for potatoes, so plan on being patient.

  3. Ronniger Potato Farm LLC - Dave's Garden

    davesgarden.com/products/gwd/c/1969

    Ronniger's has actually merged with another potato vendor and is now known as Potato Garden. Located in Colorado, they offer early, main crop, late crop and fingerling potatoes as well as garlic; and plenty of advice on how to choose, plant, and care for your potatoes to ensure a successful crop.

  4. Growing Potatoes in Bags - Dave's Garden

    davesgarden.com/guides/articles/growing-potatoes-in-bags

    Growing Bag Potatoes. Now that you have your bag, you’ll want to create the perfect environment for your seed potatoes. The best medium to use in your container is a mix of container soil and compost. Add a small layer of soil to the bottom of the bag (just a few inches), and then add your seed potatoes on the top of that first layer.

  5. Tater Chitting: Preparing Your Seed Potatoes for Planting -...

    davesgarden.com/guides/articles/view/3671

    Fingerling potatoes are an exception to the late season potato rule of thumb, benefiting from larger tubers when chitted. Certified seed potatoes are preferred, as they have been inspected and/or tested for disease. Select potatoes in good condition, discarding any rotten, damaged, black, or dark-green potatoes.

  6. The Humble Potato and How It Changed the World - Dave's Garden

    davesgarden.com/guides/articles/the-humble-potato-and-how-it-changed-the-world

    Potatoes mature between 75 and 120 days depending on the variety. However, you can tease a few new potatoes from the edges of the hills earlier than that if you are careful. When the plants have withered and turned yellow, carefully dig your potato harvest and store them in a cool, dark area.

  7. Traditional St. Patrick's Day Planting Peas and Potatoes - Dave's...

    davesgarden.com/.../traditional-st-patricks-day-planting-peas-and-potatoes

    Growing from seed potatoes can be a new experience for you and your family this St. Patrick's Day. Basically, not how many eyes, or small sprouts, are on each potato. For large potatoes, you can cut pieces off that contain at least two eyes and plant them as separate seed starts, but for the smallest potatoes or those with only one or two eyes ...

  8. Vegetable Gardening:Skinny sweet potatos - Dave's Garden

    davesgarden.com/community/forums/t/1292067

    A. This condition is caused by high fertility. The edible portion of the sweet potato plant is a storage root. Luxurious growing conditions cause vigorous vine growth and result in poorly-developed stringy roots. Maturity and variety also affect the texture of sweet potatoes.

  9. The Sweet Potato History, Uses, and Culture - Dave's Garden

    davesgarden.com/guides/articles/view/358

    Growing sweet potatoes. Those living in warmer climates can grow their own sweet potatoes. They need between 80 and 120 days to mature, depending on the variety. Long, hot, dry summers are preferred and they need to be harvested before first frost. Sweet potatoes are not grown from seeds or from chunks with ‘eyes’ like the white potato.

  10. Wood Prairie Farm - Dave's Garden

    davesgarden.com/products/gwd/c/107

    We ordered 3 varieties (Butte, Red Cloud, and Yukon Gold) from WoodPrairie Farm last spring and did we ever get a fabulous potato crop! We have been eating potatoes every day, giving potatoes away, and still have 3 large containers of them. Each variety produced very delicious potatoes. We will order from them again this year. Positive

  11. New Potatoes or Fingerlings? - Dave's Garden

    davesgarden.com/guides/articles/view/2517

    To harvest new potatoes, it is important to know how the potato plant grows. There are many different methods of planting potatoes, but in all cases the seed potato produces sprouts which grow into steams one or more feet high, and the new potato tubers develop from the sprouts, either underground or under a thick layer of mulch.