3 Reasons to Grow Potatoes in Containers

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  • čas přidán 13. 04. 2023
  • In last season’s container potato growing trial, we tested two different potato varieties in fabric and plastic containers. On the results page, I show you the growing equipment and methods we used, and compare the yields of our container grown potatoes with our field grown potatoes.
    You can find those results here: www.vegetableacademy.com/post...
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    LEARN MORE
    ⇨ Subscribe to this channel: / @vegetableacademy
    ⇨ Get started with my FREE Workshop: www.vegetableacademy.com/yt-f...
    ⇨ Enroll in the Seed to Table course: www.vegetableacademy.com/course

Komentáře • 268

  • @ChauNguyen-sm3iv
    @ChauNguyen-sm3iv Před rokem +284

    I'm a Asian so I eat rice. I recycle my 50 pounds rice bags to plant my potatoes.
    I rolled the bags down to 1/4 of the height to put dirt and potatoes in. Add more dirt and unroll the bags up when they grow taller. Until Fall, when the plants die down I harvest the potatoes. As long as we eat rice we'll have bags to grow them.

    • @isaaclopes2831
      @isaaclopes2831 Před 8 měsíci +12

      Since you said "we", I'm assuming this is a family home. Would you be open to share how long it takes a family with X number of ppl to finish a bag that big? I've always been curious

    • @choilive
      @choilive Před 8 měsíci +16

      @@isaaclopes2831a family of 5 will go through a 50lb bag in a month if that is their primary source of starchy carbs.

    • @ianpatterson3061
      @ianpatterson3061 Před 8 měsíci +2

      Potatoes by the 50lbs bag cheaper than the rice

    • @Somedude20282
      @Somedude20282 Před 7 měsíci +6

      ​@@ianpatterson3061But rice is far different than potato, they aren't a comparable starch. Grain vs tuber

    • @ianpatterson3061
      @ianpatterson3061 Před 7 měsíci +1

      @@Somedude20282 I fail to correlate the response to the premise of the statement.

  • @PLF...
    @PLF... Před rokem +25

    It's so rewarding waiting a season for your precious potatoes to grow and being able to harvest an entire meal you nursed from seed. The other 364 days though, off to the store.

    • @LKRaider
      @LKRaider Před 21 dnem

      One meal? 🤔

    • @valtoton2982
      @valtoton2982 Před 23 hodinami +1

      🤔 I know right? It sounds off. 🤷🏼‍♀️
      Currently I'm growing a multi course meals . 😀. I'm growing the following.....Salads: Lettuce, cucumbers, carrots, celery, tomatoes, Radicchio, endive. Main course: Potatoes, corn, artichokes, just add chicken or beef! Dessert: Watermelon 😍 Snack time: Sunflower seeds and in in the fall i'll have pumpkin seeds too! 😋😋😋

  • @lauriestlyon8773
    @lauriestlyon8773 Před rokem +85

    I live on a canal boat in the UK. I grow everything in containers. Am experimenting with hydroponics. Smaller containers and less weight equals more space to grow and bigger crop. Plus, water I have , but soil I need to buy. Have just found a way to grow hydroponic potatoes in perlite. REAL excited for this.

  • @IfYouGiveAGirlAnAcre
    @IfYouGiveAGirlAnAcre Před rokem +215

    Harvest was so easy too! Dumped on a tarp and let the kids harvest with their hands.

    • @myurbangarden7695
      @myurbangarden7695 Před rokem +5

      Agreed

    • @jonslg240
      @jonslg240 Před rokem +2

      Only problem is you end up with a $10 container and $5 in soil for $3.99 worth of potatoes. Not to mention the water and labor.

    • @IfYouGiveAGirlAnAcre
      @IfYouGiveAGirlAnAcre Před rokem

      @@jonslg240 my bags were less than $2 each, bought in a 12 pack. I’m not sure exactly what I paid in soil, I remember buying a $35 bag of mix and it filled 12 bags, I think. 😅 I’m reusing the bags and soil this year, just mixed in some compost and fertilizer. I used potatoes from the grocery store that had sprouted in my pantry, so seed potatoes were cheap.
      It’s all about finding what works for you and in your budget! I don’t mind the labor or work involved. It gets me outside rather watching tv, so I don’t calculate it in as cost.

    • @ThethomasJefferson
      @ThethomasJefferson Před rokem +19

      @@IfYouGiveAGirlAnAcre yeah, with a lot of that is reusable it will bring down the overall cost in the long run.

    • @WFly101
      @WFly101 Před 10 měsíci +6

      ​@@jonslg240← someone who doesn't know what he's talking about

  • @raccoontrashpanda1467
    @raccoontrashpanda1467 Před rokem +36

    Ease of harvest is also a big reason to grow potatoes in containers. No more digging around to find them and inevitability missing a few, just tip the pot out onto a tarp and separate the potatoes from the soil that can be re-used.

  • @neoanderson4840
    @neoanderson4840 Před 11 měsíci +10

    LOVE THE FAMILY PICKING FRUITS OF LABOR 😊

  • @sahar_services
    @sahar_services Před rokem +14

    And I'll add to that, and probably everyone will agree with me it is way easy to harvest potatoes from a container!

  • @Eric-gi9kg
    @Eric-gi9kg Před rokem +3

    I don't have the land, and I did and Do grow mine in containers... halved 55 gallon plastic barrels.. and it works great.

  • @jwrightgardening
    @jwrightgardening Před rokem +49

    Ooh, thank you for the info about scab! I assumed it was a disease that would carry over. Now I know to check out my soil ph and I won't worry about using some scabby potatoes as seed.

  • @ImmortalLemon
    @ImmortalLemon Před rokem +15

    I’m still trying to perfect the technique of planting potatoes in a very tall container and periodically filling the container with soil as it grows upwards so that you get potatoes WAY deeper and more developed further down. I haven’t fully succeeded but I’m making progress

    • @joeschmoe6516
      @joeschmoe6516 Před rokem +3

      It's called Hilling

    • @valtoton2982
      @valtoton2982 Před 23 hodinami +1

      Also that only works for indeterminate potatoes... for determine potatoes it's not necessary! 😀

  • @Argonaut80
    @Argonaut80 Před rokem +22

    I don’t grow them in containers or in the ground. I grow under straw, and have great results, plus not digging, or potting soil cost.

    • @rosebayer114
      @rosebayer114 Před rokem +5

      Can you describe the process? Sounds interesting.

    • @Argonaut80
      @Argonaut80 Před rokem

      @@rosebayer114 Initially it took some work t prepare a spot. Marked out a 12’x12’ square. Cut out the sod and flipped it over at the end of Summer. Added a little compost, and covered with about a foot of straw. I let that rot all winter. In the spring I raked the straw off. Placed my seed taters evenly spaced on top the dirt, and covered with old straw, plus new to depth of about 1 foot. Require little to no water. Plants come up. When they are ready, you just part the straw, and the taters are right on top of the soil. Sooooooo easy. Then the bed is already to go for next year. I made two beds to rotate. No digging, no damaging taters from digging, no mounding, no potting soil or containers, very little watering. I harvest my taters in about 10 minutes. Very good results, and no diseases yet after four years.

    • @furryplantsandcoins9070
      @furryplantsandcoins9070 Před rokem +3

      Are you putting it in the bail? Because if you're just planning it in the ground and then topping it off with hey then yes you're still using the ground. Otherwise I'm confused.

    • @Argonaut80
      @Argonaut80 Před rokem +13

      @@furryplantsandcoins9070 I’m growing them on top of the ground, under about 12in of straw. When you harvest, none of the potatoes are underground. They are on the surface of the ground. Harvesting, is as simple as moving the straw aside, and picking them up. I then put the straw back to compost, and the following year, I add new straw on top. I can harvest my 12’x12’ patch in about 10 minutes. There are videos on CZcams showing this method. It’s so dang easy, and I get between 50 and 60 lbs from that plot. It’s worth mentioning that I have two of these plots. I grow a crook neck pumpkin in the other one, and rotate.

    • @charitylewis3370
      @charitylewis3370 Před 4 měsíci +1

      What zone do you live in? I have watched results on CZcams for several different zones. And everyone seems to get a small yield of very small potatoes. We have a larger family and it would definitely make things easier. If this method were to give us a reasonable size potato in a larger yield

  • @owendavies8227
    @owendavies8227 Před rokem +162

    Growing in containers is so much easier. No digging. Easy on your back.

    • @Howwerelivingfishing
      @Howwerelivingfishing Před rokem +9

      So satisfying to harvest too

    • @EthanPerales.
      @EthanPerales. Před rokem +3

      Yes that's true, but as a gymbro gardener, it's a good workout.

    • @ronen124
      @ronen124 Před rokem +2

      @@EthanPerales. Cultivo mis papas en el supermercado dentro de una bolsa de plástico perforada

    • @EthanPerales.
      @EthanPerales. Před rokem

      @@ronen124 jaja

    • @play005517
      @play005517 Před rokem +3

      ​​@@EthanPerales.bending down to work the ground can get your muscles injured if not careful

  • @parkerbarnes7726
    @parkerbarnes7726 Před rokem +13

    The biggest reason I don't grow potatoes in ground is how destructive harvesting is to the soil network. If you don't have a lot of ground to grow on, you might want to conserve that soil for other crops that don't require such disruption.

    • @russell2449
      @russell2449 Před 7 měsíci +2

      In which case you should try the container method dude ;?)

  • @theresaheywood9479
    @theresaheywood9479 Před rokem +11

    I've just found your chanel. I'm so inspired to grow my own vegetables. Brilliant advice 😊

  • @marschlosser4540
    @marschlosser4540 Před rokem +11

    The best potatoes I can raise here (Arizona) are in tubs. But, tho we have an 8.5 Ph, no scab. Plant rye (the grain) a month before planting potatoes. there's a chemical in rye that when turned under kills scab.

    • @ForteFaiey
      @ForteFaiey Před rokem +1

      Turned under? What do you mean by that?

    • @marschlosser4540
      @marschlosser4540 Před rokem +4

      @@ForteFaiey Disked, plowed, or killed by mulch. You can even crush it when it inflorescences and leave that as a mulch. We've been doing that for untold generations. Raising a crucifer in the rye can also kill nematode. Arugula is favored in potato country.

  • @whiterabbit6148
    @whiterabbit6148 Před rokem +28

    I grow my potatoes and sweet potatoes in containers every year. I live in New Mexico, so our soil isn’t suited for potato growing, plus, I can move the potato pots to some shade if they are getting too much direct Sun in the hotter months when temps go above 100. My tomatoes and peppers love the direct summer sun, but my potatoes, not so much 😂

    • @littleredhen3218
      @littleredhen3218 Před 8 měsíci +1

      I would love to learn how to grow sweet potatoes successfully. Where how do you choose your soil for proper pH or minerals? Any tips on where to buy supplies and seed potato or slips? I really want to learn about that. Any CZcams vids that helped you?

    • @whiterabbit6148
      @whiterabbit6148 Před 8 měsíci +1

      @@littleredhen3218 I kinda just started winging it as an experiment one day years ago… You can choose just about any healthy looking organic sweet potato from the grocery, and place the pointy end (you might even see some root hairs and eyes) of it into a jar filled with water so about half of the sweet potato is submerged. Place it in a sunny spot, change the water weekly, and in a few weeks, you should have some nice green shoots called slips. When your slips have a few leaves on them, you can gently break them off of the mother sweet potato right at the base so you don’t snap the growing portion. You then let the slips root in a small glass of water, changing the water weekly until you have nice long healthy roots. Then you can plant outdoors in a nice sunny spot. This process can take 6-12 weeks total, so make sure you take that into consideration. Depending on your planting zone, most ppl plant their sweet potatoes in May or so, so you would want to start your slips around February. Just figure out your planting zone and plan accordingly!
      I generally just use a high quality potting mix in half barrel planters because the tubers will need room to grow, and sweet potatoes like warm and sunny conditions.
      Make sure the soil stays moist, but not soggy, or your plants will get root rot. Watch out for pests, and good luck! I’ve had a lot of fun growing sweet potatoes this way, and they make really attractive decorative vines, so I’ve even put them out on the front porch for looks as a bonus! I’ll look for some useful links and post them below :)

  • @carrotspaghetti236
    @carrotspaghetti236 Před rokem +7

    I'm doing it this year because I have an out of this world gopher problem.

    • @brianmccarthy5557
      @brianmccarthy5557 Před rokem +3

      We solved a gopher problem with a very large cat. She parked herself at a gopher hole and never moved for weeks. We never saw her catch anything but she kept getting even bigger and soon there was no sign of gophers. Then she finally went back to sleep on her favorite spot on the porch wall where she surveyed the garden. Never had a sign of gophers in the neighborhood since. Since with mice she always left the heads and tails for us to dispose of, I've always wondered if she ate them entirely or found some clever place to dispose of any inedible remains. My thought was that she placed them in the tunnels she wasn't watching to scare the gophers into coming to her. She was a great hunter. We loved you and miss you Fluffy Godzilla (she really was huge and furry)!
      Get, or borrow, a cat like her!!

  • @florcontreras254
    @florcontreras254 Před 11 měsíci +1

    Thank you for sharing knowledge ❤

  • @taylor506
    @taylor506 Před rokem +2

    Informative, and professional. Nothing like growing your own food. I appreciate the knowledge. Thanks for posting. I've subbed, keep up the awesome content.

  • @dwrecktheanimal
    @dwrecktheanimal Před 2 měsíci +1

    I'm impressed. I lift my 10gals fairly often and that's a heavy amount of soil. Yours look to be at least twice that. 💪🏼

  • @cindyrobertson3798
    @cindyrobertson3798 Před rokem +3

    This is useful .I've had scab.year after year

  • @ROCKDIVA85
    @ROCKDIVA85 Před 2 měsíci +2

    I love potatoes. They are delicious.

  • @harmonicresonanceproject
    @harmonicresonanceproject Před 2 měsíci +1

    I'm going to do container potatoes this year! Great little video.

  • @A.Martin
    @A.Martin Před rokem +5

    Handy thing growing potatoes in a pot is you wont end up with potatoes taking over your entire garden after a few seasons.

  • @carlosux
    @carlosux Před rokem +1

    dude your work is great. funny how you can immediately tell how good you are

  • @millionairementality_
    @millionairementality_ Před rokem +2

    Excellent information
    Thank you!

  • @startc9080
    @startc9080 Před rokem +3

    Tysm!!❤

  • @myurbangarden7695
    @myurbangarden7695 Před rokem +17

    If you burry potatoes 🥔 in the ground you will STILL be harvesting those tubers 3 or 4 years from now.

    • @Eddie_the_Husky
      @Eddie_the_Husky Před rokem +5

      Ground also has minerals, among other things, plus it's free. Potting mix costs more than potatoes, easily.

    • @BarefootEarthGoddess
      @BarefootEarthGoddess Před rokem +7

      ​@Eddie_the_Husky Depends on your in ground soil quality. Many places are high in lead and also aluminum, which throws off pH.

  • @hobomaninabox841
    @hobomaninabox841 Před 4 měsíci

    This is probably 1 of the best self sustaining food sources. The spores only take a few days to come in and you can have countless numbers of potatoes to eat for a long time

  • @germanjesus
    @germanjesus Před rokem +1

    I grow em in tires and it works amazing

  • @johntheherbalistg8756
    @johntheherbalistg8756 Před 2 měsíci

    Another good reason (my main motivation) is to get all the potatoes. Every time I've grown potatoes in the ground, I've left some, as evidenced by their volunteering the following year

  • @dorindafulton
    @dorindafulton Před rokem +1

    Great info 😊🤗

  • @patriciatinkey2677
    @patriciatinkey2677 Před 7 měsíci

    Thanks to all who commented here, you are sharing some really great tips!😊

  • @WinstonSmithGPT
    @WinstonSmithGPT Před rokem +1

    We used the bags last year. Potatoes looked like grapes. 😂😂😂

  • @PintuMahakul
    @PintuMahakul Před 7 měsíci

    👍Growing it is tricky. Very nice and amazing video art work! We highly appreciate your effort and time. Thank you very much for sharing.

  • @wvhaugen
    @wvhaugen Před 8 měsíci

    I tried grow bags this year. I had good results. The bags are heavier than it looks on this video, so be prepared if you are using actual soil instead of potting mix.

  • @russell2449
    @russell2449 Před rokem +4

    DIG TRENCHES and plant in them, then as soon as the stalk and leaves begin to grow, keep piling on straw, forcing the plant to grow taller. Eventually you end up with about 10"-12" of straw which results in the potatoes growing ABOVE GROUND and in the straw! Then whenever you want taters, you just reach down in the straw and pull em out, no diggin, no scab and Bob's your uncle ;?)

    • @russell2449
      @russell2449 Před rokem +2

      That said, instead of trenches I guess you could do the same with containers, just fill them about half full of soil, then start adding straw the same you would in a trench and harvest clean, scab-free taters ;?)

    • @patriciatinkey2677
      @patriciatinkey2677 Před 7 měsíci

      But the gophers LOVE that method! No digging for them, either! 😂😅🤣

    • @russell2449
      @russell2449 Před 7 měsíci

      @@patriciatinkey2677 Done it for years and never had any problem with gophers nor any other pests. Less problems with scab and other fungal issues too, although that in itself isn't hard proof, BUT if you live in areas where there's too much clay, rocks or rain, growing them above ground could also be a benefit ;?)

  • @andreakramer4159
    @andreakramer4159 Před rokem +11

    How many potato eyes do you put in each container?
    And the are 5 gal containers, correct?
    Thank you

    • @myurbangarden7695
      @myurbangarden7695 Před rokem +2

      Depends. I russet seed for a 5 gallon bag, but red potatoes 🥔 I plant closer so I get those taste small roasters.

    • @andreakramer4159
      @andreakramer4159 Před rokem

      Thank you 😊

    • @VegetableAcademy
      @VegetableAcademy  Před rokem +3

      That's a good question because the number of eyes (not just the number of seed potatoes) impacts the overall stem density and the stem density impacts the final yield, but the number of eyes was not one of the variables we controlled in this first trial run. We just planted two seed potatoes in each container. The containers were 10 gallons in size. You can find many more details about the trial on this page: www.vegetableacademy.com/post/growing-potatoes-in-containers

    • @andreakramer4159
      @andreakramer4159 Před rokem

      Thank you for sending data. Very informative
      Regards
      Andrea

  • @vaga4239
    @vaga4239 Před rokem +4

    How do you store all those?!

  • @weston.weston
    @weston.weston Před 19 dny

    This is inspiring, thank you for sharing.

  • @michaeldeckard4952
    @michaeldeckard4952 Před 7 měsíci

    Seems like it's working... well done

  • @LBCB94025
    @LBCB94025 Před 11 měsíci +1

    it Also makes harvesting them infinitely easier!!
    because you don't have to worry about whether or not some are still in the ground deeper, or off to one side or something like that;
    cuz you can just take the thing and dump it out over grate/screen of some kind of sift all out!!
    (even the tiny ones!)
    🧐🤔😆🤷🏼😁👍🏻🖤👏🏻

  • @frankievillarreal9643
    @frankievillarreal9643 Před rokem +1

    good job

  • @ThatBritishHomestead
    @ThatBritishHomestead Před 6 měsíci

    There is nothing better than home grown spuds

  • @creativecoding1
    @creativecoding1 Před rokem +4

    What's that tunnel you got there?

    • @lornaj3310
      @lornaj3310 Před rokem +1

      Yes I have this question, too, and what do you use it for? Can you grow in it all winter?

  • @wesman7837
    @wesman7837 Před rokem +12

    It works EXTREMELY well to grow potatoes in stacks of tires as well!

    • @TriMarkC
      @TriMarkC Před rokem +2

      That’s a great idea! I can’t do that - the Mrs would claim I’m turning our back yard into a salvage yard!

    • @julia1234
      @julia1234 Před 9 měsíci +2

      Except they are toxic

  • @TheNukeMuffin
    @TheNukeMuffin Před rokem +1

    Also a good idea when the land is mostly clay.

  • @itmakesyouthink
    @itmakesyouthink Před rokem +7

    I use tyres with the sidewalls removed, and as they grow, put another one on top, and add more soil. Get extra tubers that way.

    • @napkinslol7906
      @napkinslol7906 Před 4 měsíci +2

      Personally I wouldn't eat food grow inside a tire. Hot rubber and all that. Makes for good flower planters though!

  • @LisaGiesler
    @LisaGiesler Před 6 měsíci

    That’s good advice. Thanks

  • @whiteangel256
    @whiteangel256 Před 9 měsíci

    Trying to grow my first batch, fingers crossed

  • @lexington476
    @lexington476 Před 7 měsíci

    I've grown many potatoes in potato bags, same results of what you show above.

  • @ruththinkingoutside.707
    @ruththinkingoutside.707 Před 2 měsíci +1

    Apartment life means containers.. after a lifetime of gardening in ground it was a big learning experience.. no major failures, a few, just .. meh.. 😅
    The rest has been great..
    when you figure out what your microclimate is you can work to the strengths..
    I only bother with a handful of veg now, but I grow a bunch of them, plus herbs and perennials for pollination.. my fruit trees have done well all things considered! 😅 I’ve got flowers on the fruit trees this year so I’m hoping 🤞..lol

  • @lisawatson3467
    @lisawatson3467 Před rokem +1

    What kind of dirt do you use in the pots containers?

  • @lornaj3310
    @lornaj3310 Před rokem +3

    Ok am I an idiot? Where is this "description" you keep talking about on the shorts?

    • @Amie021
      @Amie021 Před rokem +2

      Tap on the small three dots in the top right if the video, then tap description.

    • @lornaj3310
      @lornaj3310 Před rokem +2

      @@Amie021 Oh. Boom. THANK YOU!

  • @djapollo1580
    @djapollo1580 Před 5 měsíci

    Thank you

  • @stilllearning1160
    @stilllearning1160 Před rokem

    Grew some great spuds this year. Dug in a good layer of Lucerne mulch and pea straw with compost I made in a 205 litre drum.

  • @IChoseLove
    @IChoseLove Před 8 měsíci

    Awesome Thank YOU

  • @bobbyhempel1513
    @bobbyhempel1513 Před rokem +1

    Another reason to grow them and containers instead of the ground is pocket gophers and moles that like to eat root vegetables/ tubers

  • @joan-lisa-smith
    @joan-lisa-smith Před 10 měsíci

    4th case, I live in the Canadian Shield region where the only acre (rest is dense forest) I can grow that is sunny enough only has 2 inches of top soil on a massive boulder and rock face just under the surface.

  • @ridgebhouse
    @ridgebhouse Před 7 měsíci

    My God, you have a beautiful family all the success😊

  • @Listenclearly1979
    @Listenclearly1979 Před rokem +2

    I put down a thin layer of sugar cane mulch, sit my potatoes on top then cover with a thick layer of sugar cane mulch.
    I harvest, sit more potatoes on top and cover with mulch. Repeat. I've not had any with scab since I started this.

    • @felicitywoodruffe4087
      @felicitywoodruffe4087 Před rokem +1

      No soil at all?

    • @Listenclearly1979
      @Listenclearly1979 Před rokem

      @@felicitywoodruffe4087 nope, the mulch slowly breaks down and creates soil but other than that none. I had trouble for a couple of harvests with scab. So I researched the issue and apparently potatoes don't like rich soil. So I tried just sugar cane mulch (it's cheap) and it worked a treat 👍

    • @Listenclearly1979
      @Listenclearly1979 Před rokem

      @@felicitywoodruffe4087 and it makes them easy to harvest, bonus!

  • @albertgaines9944
    @albertgaines9944 Před 7 měsíci

    Thanks

  • @mynewlife1911
    @mynewlife1911 Před 11 měsíci +1

    I have land and still grow em in containers. Just seems easier on my body and I don’t have to dig em up.

  • @misterdood4
    @misterdood4 Před 11 měsíci

    Hey thanks for the tips, I'd love to pay it back with a tip of my own knowledge. You seem to be using a directional microphone and having on the side like you do causes the audio to come out of one side of headphones / speakers, there's many simple solutions to it! Keep on keepin' on.

  • @olibarahosasa1137
    @olibarahosasa1137 Před 10 měsíci

    I cut up some home grown potatoes, put in bowl of water and let sit/rinse until the excess starch is gone, put them in the airfryer with a teaspoon of sunflower oil, and out came THE most rustic-homestyle-granniesrecipe fries, so good, and so rewarding, it makes a human being feel good. It is kind of the opposite of ordering in food that gives you that feeling you spent a fortune on just one meal while you could have gotten a big bag full of products at the market for that amount of money. 😂

  • @tempestive1
    @tempestive1 Před rokem

    Potato towers with layers of straw and substrate surrounded by net work great too, and saves up on space

  • @gulldaw272
    @gulldaw272 Před rokem +1

    Does scab effect if theyre edible. Ive bought potatoes from the supermarket with it on

  • @marjoriejohnson6535
    @marjoriejohnson6535 Před 10 měsíci

    Grow my potatoes in tubs on my deck., especially fingerlings' -- the best potatoes for cream of potato soup or roasted or homefries..yum.

  • @Boo-pv4hn
    @Boo-pv4hn Před rokem

    I’ve been growing in potato since 18 when I k oh had a concrete balcony tomatoes and potatoes and carrots.

  • @gardeningwithkirk
    @gardeningwithkirk Před 2 měsíci

    Beautiful ❤ from Gardening with kirk

  • @deusx.machinaanime.3072
    @deusx.machinaanime.3072 Před 8 měsíci

    I can’t contain myself. 😮😅😊😂

  • @philipozminkowski8200
    @philipozminkowski8200 Před 10 dny

    I live in an area with lots of black walnut trees. They put out jugalone, a hormone that stunts or kills a lot of plants. Containers help me a lot when it comes to potatoes and tomatoes as jugalone kills these outright. Now if the squirrels wouldn't bury the nuts of the trees in my containers this would be a perfect system.

  • @samuelbird5255
    @samuelbird5255 Před 10 měsíci

    Thank you from Alaska eh

  • @route5discgolf
    @route5discgolf Před 7 měsíci

    Tree planter for sure!

  • @mrcallitlikeitisfan2788
    @mrcallitlikeitisfan2788 Před 5 měsíci

    I took a few notes

  • @nolanmarginet3601
    @nolanmarginet3601 Před 10 měsíci

    Not sure what the temp is in your high tunnels but potatoes enjoy cool weather. There peak growing happens at 20 degrees C and complete stops at 30 degrees C so you may be able to grow bigger and better potatoes outside your high tunnel without taking up that inside space

  • @Flying_Doodle_Homestead
    @Flying_Doodle_Homestead Před 3 měsíci

    Approximately how long from planting the sprouted potatoes to harvest? And can I harvest sooner to get smaller potatoes or is that a different variety? Thank you for the informative and quick video. Very helpful ❤

  • @brumm0m3ntum94
    @brumm0m3ntum94 Před rokem

    4, probably the most convincing argument, they grow just as well and harvest is much easier

  • @santhoshv4060
    @santhoshv4060 Před 11 měsíci

    First time I see reddish potatoes 😮😮😮

  • @neilkaippallil8390
    @neilkaippallil8390 Před 7 měsíci

    Nursery Kid Farmers are Lovely

  • @heavymetalbassist5
    @heavymetalbassist5 Před rokem +6

    It would cost 10x the price of store bought to grow in potting soil.

  • @chadwickducharme1194
    @chadwickducharme1194 Před rokem

    Fantastic information. Thank you for sharing

  • @stevehufngel7221
    @stevehufngel7221 Před rokem +1

    But let’s be honest: potatoes are something that you need land to grow. My father used to grow them on 0.1-0.2 hectares that was all we needed to feed our family and my grandparents with potatoes for a year. I don’t know if that amount would be sustainable and worth to grow in buckets, but if you just want some potatoes it might be the way to do for people who live over really poor quality soil! We have a lot of clay in our soil, it is good quality but it’s hard to work with it. I also like the idea of bringing them into the greenhouse. It is always a good idea to plant a seedling first out of anything, it just might not be worth it. I remember back in the early 2000’s we had a good amount of unused space in our green (foil) tents and we even planted seedlings of corn. I guess my father had some spare time and plastic cups. I like the kind of videos you make, excuse me for my broken english!
    Have a great harvest this year, best regards!

  • @seansudduth7882
    @seansudduth7882 Před 8 měsíci

    Containers for the win

  • @IngridKen
    @IngridKen Před rokem +1

    Cool

  • @Antreus
    @Antreus Před rokem

    Do you have a work schedule with deadlines and entry points to successfully transitioning between back to back crops to make the most out of a high tunnel. I struggle a lot with planning and get very distracted but once I have a quest for the day I get it done

  • @creepyloner1979
    @creepyloner1979 Před 11 měsíci

    easy to tell when they need watering too, just pick them up.

  • @gnetsolutions3076
    @gnetsolutions3076 Před rokem

    good

  • @karenleonetti4905
    @karenleonetti4905 Před 5 měsíci

    I have access to the kill when food grade ice cream buckets. I have drilled holes in the bottom for container gardening before. How many potatoes or eyes of the potato do you put in each bucket and how much soil at the bottom to start? Filling up more soil as the leaves grow upward, correct? And what kind of yield can I expect from how many potatoes planted?

  • @jeffoi2023
    @jeffoi2023 Před rokem +1

    Where dis you but your green house? Or you just made on your own. Thanks

  • @glennplatvoet7111
    @glennplatvoet7111 Před 8 měsíci

    You can adjust the p h lime or something like mer asid or citrus

  • @Emeraldwitch30
    @Emeraldwitch30 Před rokem

    I have scab in my soil and i grow all my potatoes in buckets now.
    I do occasionally put a few in the ground. Usually on the edge of my compist areas. For some reason the ones growing by compost piles dont get scabby either

  • @darrelljackson2600
    @darrelljackson2600 Před 8 měsíci

    Yes but test have been done that 3 potato in small container yields about 3 lbs. same in ground is about 9 lbs

  • @junmikiewicz1951
    @junmikiewicz1951 Před 5 měsíci

    Thanks for ,haw often we have to water them, and what ventrrliser? Thanks

  • @dimetruth
    @dimetruth Před 3 měsíci

    What size container do you recommend for those smaller baby-style potatoes?

  • @milankoirala5737
    @milankoirala5737 Před rokem

    Wow

  • @djowen23
    @djowen23 Před rokem

    Damn you did a really good job with these container potatoes... my question is what size container is best to grow potatoes in?

    • @VegetableAcademy
      @VegetableAcademy  Před rokem

      We haven't done a trial on container sizes yet, but I would be reluctant to start with anything less than 10 gallons for potatoes.

  • @vanessapaddison820
    @vanessapaddison820 Před 2 měsíci

    What are heat loving crops?

  • @wolf310ii
    @wolf310ii Před 11 měsíci

    Only one of the reason is to some degree valid, if you want to take your potatos for a walk.
    If the ph of the soil is to high, just lower it.
    And if you dont have land to plant potatos in the ground, you also dont have the land to place the containers.

  • @trinitylane2202
    @trinitylane2202 Před 10 měsíci

    I'm curious if any chemicals leach into the potatoes from the plastic containers.