EPIC FAIL?? How NOT to Plant Potatoes!

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  • čas přidán 27. 04. 2020
  • It's a little cold but Tractor Time with Tim decides to plant potatoes in the garden! TTWT uses the John Deere 1025R and Heavy Hitch middle buster to create the seed bed and the hiller bedder to cover the seed potatoes. After reading the instructions on the bag of seed potatoes, it appears we may have an epic failure. What do you think?
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Komentáře • 298

  • @darkwinter6028
    @darkwinter6028 Před 4 lety +22

    Several months later... farmers in China are puzzled by potato plants emerging at random in their fields...

  • @jasone9
    @jasone9 Před 4 lety +16

    When I was growing up we raised/sold potatoes for winter use. We planted anywhere from 1,200 to 2,000 pound of seed each year and planted all by hand. Our method was using a 5 gallon bucket to carry seed and then we would walk heel to toe in the furrow dropping one seed per step and then would step on it to firmly hold it in place so it wouldn't move when covered. Never worried about eyes being up or down. When covering we had a similar implement that was home made. We only cover with enough soil to make the furrow level or slightly raised. After potatoes are up about 6 or 8 inches we would go back over and hill them up. Would hill them again when they were at the tallest point that we could drive over them without hitting the plants. While this all sounds like a lot of work, it was nothing compared to harvesting them with our old digger that was converted from being horse drawn to be pulled with the tractor. It brings the potatoes up and drops them on top of the ground and then we would use the 5 gallon buckets again to pick them up. I still have and use that digger to this day, but for WAY less potatoes.

    • @mrelectron6220
      @mrelectron6220 Před 4 lety +1

      Jason just reading that story made my back ache.

    • @Chilrman
      @Chilrman Před 4 lety

      Jason plant mine same way, I had them in the ground middle of February and only planted an acre . Have been digging a few to eat now that it is mid April next month will get my digger out and find out how well they produced in the deep,Deep South.

    • @MrBill3288
      @MrBill3288 Před 2 lety +1

      Growing up we did potatoes too. 6-10 Acers. Old 2 row planter & 2 row digger.. we'd crawl behind and pick into buckets or 10# sacks. We'd then go around our region selling to local restaurants and grocery stores.. always kept enough on hand to last us the winter too. Good old north Dakota black soil. Red potatoes for the win!!!

  • @Oultman
    @Oultman Před 4 lety +4

    I grew up on a potato farm. It makes no difference if the eyes are up. Spacing only changes the size of potatoes. We grow for the French fry market so we do large spacing of 18 - 20". Superiors are a great early potato. They go for $1/lb here. On the depth we always put a light covering from the planter and then add a bigger row once they pop out of the ground. Thanks for the video!

  • @millerfilmproductions502
    @millerfilmproductions502 Před 4 lety +9

    Never worried about the eyes being up, and we've always had great taters! In terms of them lasting a long time, select Yellow Kennebec or Red Pontiacs to get your best shelf-life. We keep ours in dedicated refrigerators in our basement. They need cool, dark spaces to store well. An old root cellar is another good place to store them.

  • @BradMyers
    @BradMyers Před 4 lety +5

    I like this video, showing everything your not supposed to do. I will be curious to see how it all turns out and what the crop is like.

  • @jimmielittle877
    @jimmielittle877 Před 3 lety

    Mom told me my uncle Billy planted corn to early this year,the ground hadn't warmed up enough and sure enough he's not harvested very little corn this year! Really enjoyed this video 💜

  • @oldtimeengineer26
    @oldtimeengineer26 Před 4 lety +2

    we always covered ours with thick straw and I am talking 65 years ago worked great and still does

  • @mrelectron6220
    @mrelectron6220 Před 4 lety +5

    I can't seem to find any here in NC Tim and really was looking forward to fresh potatoes. Also when I have problems with my tractor wanting to drift I will lock the differential to help and be sure your in 4wd of course loose stabilizers don't help LOL. Stay safe and well during this crazy time were living in right now.

  • @dipityquinn9871
    @dipityquinn9871 Před 4 lety +1

    I’m a dairy farmer from New Zealand I like to watch your vida of the little tractors

  • @grantdeisig1360
    @grantdeisig1360 Před 4 lety +1

    I wish you guys would have planted one row completely eyes down and one row completely eyes up.... but hey the weather had been cold! So I don't blame you for just wanting to get it done. I really liked this episode, very informative. I love gardening, so any help I can get is appreciated!

  • @allandoell1025
    @allandoell1025 Před 2 lety

    I just received my new hiller/bed attachment yesterday. Great video to get me going! Thanks a bunch!!

  • @HTPJohn
    @HTPJohn Před 4 lety

    Thanks for showing us your potato experience. Helps us planning to try our luck. God Bless.

  • @nancyincanada5553
    @nancyincanada5553 Před 4 lety +1

    LOL@middle buster! Mike and I need that too:) I'm not sure if we will fit through our door once this quarantine is over. LOL Now we are walking and gardening vs snacking:) Great video Kristie and Tim! As always, love the humor:) I think your potatoes will be just fine:) You two have an awesome day, and thanks for the great video.

  • @bruceloder1948
    @bruceloder1948 Před 4 lety +2

    I’ve planted potatoes cut and whole. I seem to get more potatoes when I drop a medium sized potato whole spaced at 16”. Of course, 18” would work fine too. I never worry about the eyes, up or down. I have a “story pole”, which is a 2”x2”x8’ board with markings on it for spacing. In this case, 16”. I used a magic marker. I drop the story pole in the trench, drop potatoes at each mark, and when I reach the end of the pole I move the pole ahead 8’. If you don’t want to bend over, mount a handle on the pole. I use the handle of a hoe to scoot the potatoes to the correct spacing. I’m going to be 70 next month and my back doesn’t like bending over much. One year a got 1:12.5 return, which means for every one pound of potatoes I planted I got back 12.5 lbs. That’s a great return. I read once the best is usually 1:10. Have you ever checked your return? I weigh mine after washing them. Yes, I dig then lightly rinse them off. No scrubbing. I made a couple boxes, 8’x2’ out of 2x4’s. I stapled 1/2” hail screen on the bottom. I set these cages over saw horses in the sun, near a hydrant. I rinse and the dirt goes out the screen bottom. When clean, I leave them in the cages to dry in the sun about 30 minutes, turning if needed. They are clean and dry and ready for my basement. I have potatoes till about December sometime. (I harvest the third week of June).

  • @ront8261
    @ront8261 Před 4 lety +3

    Seems like when you turn your "bow" just a bit, your "stern" attachment moves quite a bit in the opposite direction?? And perhaps the 3 pt stabilizer bars were loose too.

  • @hammer1togo
    @hammer1togo Před 4 lety +1

    My Dad was the Potato King. I helped him till I got married. He would always plant them with their eyes up. ( just because they came up faster) 16 to 18 inches apart. a small handful of triple 13 fertilizer in between the potatoes. Do not let the fertilizer get near the potatoes or they will rot ! As the potatoes grow, the roots will get fed by the fertilizer. Also, dirt heaped up a little to start with. Then later he would hill them up with a tiller as he tilled. Not sure this method will work where you live but it always worked in Missouri !!!

  • @kennethbrown109
    @kennethbrown109 Před 4 lety

    Down here in Georgia we try to plant potatoes on Valentines Day. I try to plant eyes up about a foot and a half apart. Doesn’t seem to matter if they land eyes up or down. I usually let them dry for at least a week after I cut them and they always turn out great. Just picked some yesterday.

  • @chrismills4213
    @chrismills4213 Před 4 lety +2

    Love potatoes...we generally grow about 400 pounds a year. For our growing season we plant around June 15th and yes the eyes are always up🤔

  • @Swfl_farmer
    @Swfl_farmer Před 4 lety +2

    Pretty funny! We are finishing up potato harvest here in South Florida. Two more weeks left!

  • @chickenjohnny3308
    @chickenjohnny3308 Před 3 lety

    I always plant on good Friday, never worried about the eyes. always bury deep 10" or so. Generally I get a good crop usually around ten to one seed potato to yield. This year we planted 400 pounds and only harvested around 100, we had a terrible potato bug issue. I love watching your channel.

  • @anthonyhenry7631
    @anthonyhenry7631 Před 4 lety +5

    I believe the heavy hitch puts the covering tool to far from the wheels. If the implement was closer to the tractor I wouldn't wonder as much. A slight turn of the steering wheel is exaggerated more behind the rear wheels the further the implement is extended.

  • @mrselah
    @mrselah Před 4 lety

    Hi Tim. I bought the same setup a couple of years ago. Love the middlebuster for making the trenches but I too have a problem with the discs wandering all over the place. Just a small amount of movement in the front end results in a lot of movement of the attachment. Maybe if it was closer to the rear wheels it might track better. I will watch the comments to see if someone has a better solution. Thanks for your videos. I bought my Johnny because of you!

  • @chrispileski6640
    @chrispileski6640 Před 4 lety +1

    I love planting taters too; 2 ozs go down, 3-5 lbs come up! I always mound, then drop the tater in a couple inches down. Last year I tested just covering them with a really thick layer of straw, no dirt, and they did very well!

  • @marksjunction69
    @marksjunction69 Před 4 lety

    Well, I certainly appreciated this demonstration. I am building my first garden this year that involves my 3520.....so it is bigger than our backyard City garden. I oddly enough was looking at both those implements from heavy hitch, but the exchange rate and shipping to Canada is crazy right now. I will be very interested in seeing how these taters turn out.

  • @jddriver9565
    @jddriver9565 Před 4 lety +2

    I planted mine last week (we already got 70F here in northern germany, so thats not an issue). We don´t cut the potatoes in half, so it doesn´t matter how we throw them in the row, we just made sure the depth is correct..

  • @waynephillips2777
    @waynephillips2777 Před 4 lety +3

    I bet they will still make. I've planted mine 8 inches deep plenty of times and it worked out but I'min LA (Lower Alabama)

  • @FelipeColby
    @FelipeColby Před 2 lety +1

    instructional, and hilarious. One way to learn is watching someone else make mistakes...especially when they correct themselves for you!

  • @johnthorpe1071
    @johnthorpe1071 Před 4 lety +1

    Thanks Christy and Tim! Nice black soil. If you read the small print, the destructions say " alternate planting potatoes and onions so that in drier weather the onions will make the eyes of the potatoes water" HAHA

  • @e.cfarmphotography1095
    @e.cfarmphotography1095 Před 4 lety +1

    We grow potatoes on are farm 8 acres of them we plant the early potatoes eyes up but it’s harder to do you have to have two people sat on the planter And then the rest we just put in the hopper of the planter and it goes anyway Eyes up or eyes down also they are to shallow it needs to be fairly deep and frost is bad for them so you want to make sure you plant after the cold it may be different in the US but that is how we do it in the uk love the videos keep up the good work 👍

  • @timkd5vmv583
    @timkd5vmv583 Před 4 lety +8

    Run the tractor in 4wheel drive and it will help stop the wandering.
    The Other Tim with Tractors

  • @DLTJR1959
    @DLTJR1959 Před 4 lety

    When we planted all we ever used was Kennebec and Red Pontiac. Planted 25# of each. We had more potatoes than we could eat. Didn't worry about the eyes up. Stored them in the basement. My Papaw always said you got more in a crooked row. We used a Super A with cultivators to lay off the rows and then cover.

  • @bradolsen9981
    @bradolsen9981 Před 4 lety +1

    Remember Tim Patience is a virtue

  • @PEI_Guy
    @PEI_Guy Před 4 lety +1

    Your hiller is very similar to one I have that is maybe 75 years old. The difference being is my blades are mounted on a 6x6 wooden beam.

  • @kingfishjrb
    @kingfishjrb Před 4 lety +1

    we always plant appo. 12 in apart in furrow. covered by dragging dirt to cover with feet. rows 30 to 36 in. apart. plant as early in march as land could be worked. potato seed were just dropped by hand never worried about eyes up or down . planted 50 lbs irish cobbler and get about 400 lbs to store and always eating new appo. 50lbs new potatoes before digging main harvest. this was in the 50s. this is in va.

  • @justinwright6611
    @justinwright6611 Před 4 lety

    Well that was a learning experience for all of us !

  • @dehavenfamilyfarm
    @dehavenfamilyfarm Před 4 lety

    Great info guys!

  • @raysmith7165
    @raysmith7165 Před 2 lety +1

    When planting potatoes I walk in the furrow bottom wearing my size 11 boots, drop a potato with each step you take just in front of your boot, that way you plant them a regular 18 inches apart. I have never worried about eyes up or down, except maybe for my earlies. I plant about 100 yards this way.

  • @ThomasPaine71
    @ThomasPaine71 Před 4 lety +7

    I wonder if you should have had the cultivators off, or raised up so that you could just cover them. It seemed like they made it wander.

  • @tractorboy31
    @tractorboy31 Před 4 lety +1

    If you have a straight blade put that on with loose sway chains for hilling so the blade will keep it straight and if you need minor corrections it can still stay on row vs tight chains and a small right or left correction can wipe out your row

    • @danabrownfield2805
      @danabrownfield2805 Před rokem

      ??? Ihave this same problem are you talking about the cultivators ? One on each side

  • @earlsmithson4749
    @earlsmithson4749 Před 4 lety

    Tim, congratulations on keeping your equipment clean.

  • @davidlove8866
    @davidlove8866 Před 4 lety +1

    In the south we always cut the eyes out, plant eyes up. Must plant on Feb 14th. In a former life while in the seed business if we hadn't sold seed potatoes by Feb 14th they went unsold.

    • @lenardburgess9400
      @lenardburgess9400 Před 4 lety

      Nah, we grow them in containers, I set them up so we have a new container ready to pull off every few weeks, in zone 7 so we get to do this for the majority of the year (using green house late in the fall)

  • @johniac7078
    @johniac7078 Před 4 lety +7

    Putting my potatoes in this weekend. Nothing like a nice fresh potato with some butter and salt!

  • @danabrownfield2805
    @danabrownfield2805 Před rokem

    Good luck getting that to work covering straight. I have the exact same problem. Have not been able to figure it out

  • @dcyphrz8532
    @dcyphrz8532 Před 4 lety +1

    Your dirt looks amazing.

  • @eosjoe565
    @eosjoe565 Před 4 lety +3

    Not sure about those grocery store potatoes. Is it just certain varieties that are resistant to sprouting? We only buy 5 lbs. of Russet potatoes at a time and keep them in a cool dark place and they still seem to constantly sprout eyes.

  • @spendingtimeinpapasbarn.1995

    I have never worried about eyes up, I just drop them in the row and cover them up. I did notice that it looked like one of your discs (right) looks angled more aggressive then the left side, could that be your problem following the row?

    • @DerekThorpe294
      @DerekThorpe294 Před 4 lety

      Mass potato farmers definitely don't worry about eye up!

  • @dflur
    @dflur Před 4 lety +1

    Stabilizer your hiller and drive straight. Start with your discs wide. If you have to change your disc deth, angle or width, you can adjust.

  • @amossnowdaharleyman9179
    @amossnowdaharleyman9179 Před 4 lety +1

    Planted some grocery store russets and some strange purple asian sweet potatoes. Been 30+ years since I planted a potato so posted a video of either a strange new weed or the beginnings of a potato plant. General opine is my taters are coming up.Russets and not the others. They seem to need much warmer weather maybe.I agree with the misses: taters are pretty cheap at the store but my misses wanted me to plant some.

  • @brianhoxworth3881
    @brianhoxworth3881 Před 4 lety

    You"ll be fine, more potatoes than you know what to do with. We planted here in So IL last week of march, they are all ready coming up.

  • @thomasyerbey337
    @thomasyerbey337 Před 4 lety +1

    Great information Tim 🇺🇸🚜 🚜

  • @emrythompson
    @emrythompson Před 4 lety +1

    Is that the same as on Stoney Ridge Farmer a few weeks ago behind his Ventrac?

  • @nickwalker7478
    @nickwalker7478 Před 4 lety

    i love all the tractor content...always informative. Question...i need a trailer to haul brush/soil/rocks ect occasionally and be able to haul the 1025 r. So a dump trailer that can be double duty. What do you recommend? Thanks..

  • @mikevowles5802
    @mikevowles5802 Před 4 lety

    Also if you use cut seed you can put cement dust on them to seal the cut sides of the potato so reduce the chance of collapse and rot

  • @beeroquoisnation
    @beeroquoisnation Před 4 lety

    Great Vidya Tim. You will surely develop a bounty with all those, provided they get the right conditions. A man told me years ago, when I said that Idaho was where potatoes are grown, that the best potatoes are grown in St. Anne, Illinois. Their sandy loam has the perfect drainage, and paired with irrigation it was claimed that you couldn't get a finer spud. God Bless.

  • @jeffslaven
    @jeffslaven Před 4 lety

    I am positive that you will get potatoes! We used to do the old car-tire stack, and always got a bonanza!

  • @floydferguson5366
    @floydferguson5366 Před 4 lety

    Great video!

  • @larryconover3925
    @larryconover3925 Před rokem

    can you show me how to connect the middle buster blade to the Shank???? my shank doesn't have holes that match the holes in the blade. thanks

  • @peterkober6758
    @peterkober6758 Před 4 lety +1

    Tim Christi very interesting and learning about planting we are still having frost most old timers say don't plant until Memorial Day
    God Bless All
    PaK

  • @unclealansyard5176
    @unclealansyard5176 Před 4 lety

    Definitely an 'eye' catching video!

  • @haddenunger1214
    @haddenunger1214 Před 4 lety

    We have a jd 770 and a 790 and the chains to keep the 3pt links together are always coming loose

  • @iceman3071
    @iceman3071 Před 4 lety

    You did everything just great! Enjoy your hugh potato crop.

  • @stanleyharrell6009
    @stanleyharrell6009 Před 4 lety +1

    Machts Nichts. They will grow just fine eyes down. You do need to space them out a bit more though. Down here in Georgia, we plant potatoes on Valentine’s Day😳. That was an old tradition passed down. We can get 3 crops of potatoes in unless we have an extremely early frost. Of course, I also plant some 115 day field corn on July 4. We will have corn ready to eat around the end of October.

  • @billyfisher7846
    @billyfisher7846 Před 3 lety +1

    I looked for a video on how they turned out but couldn't find one. How did they turn out? Were they too deep?

  • @huntercreekfarm4932
    @huntercreekfarm4932 Před 4 lety

    I run a market garden, plant around 2000lbs every year. It doesn't matter which way the potato lands and spacing is about 4-6" apart on the planter.

  • @bigjim5723
    @bigjim5723 Před 4 lety

    ha! i liked the buzzer sound and the red x-boxes. made me laugh quite hard. lol we always planted eyes up and one length of ur shoe or longer, back when i raised some taters, and i had some very nice ones back in the day. over a dozen bushel one yr. now ur gonna need some new crates for ur harvest.

  • @alittleofthisandalittleofthat

    What do you spray the plants with? I plant Superior they are a great potato. This year it’s Superior and Yukon Gold.

  • @HamiltonvilleFarm
    @HamiltonvilleFarm Před 4 lety

    This video made me laugh 👍 good stuff

  • @genedewitt3992
    @genedewitt3992 Před 4 lety

    You should check at farm store Like Tractor Supply or Farm & Fleet. They carry all kind garden seed ect.

  • @lesphilaja5722
    @lesphilaja5722 Před 4 lety +5

    I ordered my seed potatoes and nursery stock in February, still haven't received them as of 4/29. I received an email last week from the company saying that overwhelming demand and Covid-19 is causing shipping delays. Their customer service is shut down, so no one to contact. I emailed them asking why orders placed early aren't shipping 1st. No response! I'll be looking for a new company for next season.

    • @Shane_O.5158
      @Shane_O.5158 Před 4 lety

      goto the bank and get a refund ( reverse order).

    • @KrazyKajun602
      @KrazyKajun602 Před 4 lety

      Check your local hardware or feed store? I buy mine from a local hardware/feed store by the sacks.

  • @robertrichard9460
    @robertrichard9460 Před 4 lety

    A whole lot of peeping going on there! LOL

  • @tipseal5246
    @tipseal5246 Před 3 lety

    The eyes are the beginning of the root the go into the ground then put the stem up to the top. Yes I have planted store bought potatoes AFTER they start to sprout

  • @ElkCreekAcres
    @ElkCreekAcres Před 4 lety

    Tim, a couple of years ago I had an awful time staying centered on the rows when I was hilling. My sway turnbuckles were as tight as they could be, never did figure out what was causing it. I kind of came to conclusion that the S tines were deeper than the discs and maybe were digging in sometimes, that was the best I could come up with. Now, last year if you look at my hilling video my hiller couldn't have run more true, just one of life's little mysteries I guess.

    • @TractorTimewithTim
      @TractorTimewithTim  Před 4 lety +1

      Thanks! The disks may be too aggressive too. Not sure.

    • @ElkCreekAcres
      @ElkCreekAcres Před 4 lety

      @@TractorTimewithTim That had crossed my mind as well, it's harder than most would think to set them up the same way year after year. LOL

  • @hughhead9079
    @hughhead9079 Před 4 lety +1

    May need to adapt to your wet soil on that patch Tim... Perhaps next 2 rows, hill the soil just a bit... 6" above grade first? Then plant 4" or so deep so the "feet" are above the water line? Spacing so close (4") may mean those spuds need add'l fertilizer and/or other trace elements (after soil test) to get size to 'em. Be a great follow up video to compare the options for planting, get votes from the sub's and declare a winner?

  • @SoldierMed68W
    @SoldierMed68W Před 4 lety

    How those radial tires working out?

  • @mikefortune4796
    @mikefortune4796 Před 4 lety

    Hi Tim and Christy you can win them all Tim but nice video good luck and stay safe

  • @robertmcmullen7930
    @robertmcmullen7930 Před 4 lety

    Well you finally did it, not the potatos, made me buy a new tractor. I just got a new 1025r TLB with a 60" mower deck. I was considering the Massey, Kubota, and Deere. I looked at the other two but did not drive them, neither the Massey or Kubota seemed to have the fit and finish of the Deere, and the Deere dealership here seems very responsive, and I like the foot pedals on the deere better than the Kubota along with many other things. It works out well, we bought a new LX178 that is still going strong and I have a Deere 4300 that I ordered in 98 but its a shuttle shift not hydro. The wife loves the hydro. Thank for the great videos, keep up the great work.

    • @TractorTimewithTim
      @TractorTimewithTim  Před 4 lety

      Congratulations! Yes, the hydrostatic drive makes it very easy to operate!

  • @mi2tn
    @mi2tn Před 4 lety

    Welcome to the world of soft earth drift on a slight grade, Tim. LOL...

  • @JAllyFarms
    @JAllyFarms Před 3 lety

    so what kind of yeild did they produce? or did you do that for other means?

  • @johniac7078
    @johniac7078 Před 4 lety +30

    Ten bucks says your potatoes will be just fine!

  • @nathanbrodeur
    @nathanbrodeur Před 4 lety

    Tim I've had potatoes 5 pound out of a 20 pound bag from the store turn into seed potatoes and turn into 10 to 15 pounds of potatoes and it doesn't matter if there cull potatoes or store grade

  • @harveyrousejr.2069
    @harveyrousejr.2069 Před 4 lety

    This year our local source of seed potatoes as well as Hoss tools sold out of potatoes before our garden was dry enough to plant. No potatoes for us this year.

  • @Formulabruce
    @Formulabruce Před 4 lety +1

    I just cut up potatoes and drop in the ground, no seed potatoes. seems to work well.

  • @DaveSteen
    @DaveSteen Před 4 lety

    When I was at home in NW Ohio we planted potatoes close to Memorial Day

  • @curtweatherbee2523
    @curtweatherbee2523 Před 3 lety

    I have one I just got it this year 2021 love it❤️ I have it on my Kabota🐝

  • @daves2960
    @daves2960 Před 4 lety

    I'll bet you'll yield all spuds you'll want. Fun to see the red "X"s.

  • @skipevans1995
    @skipevans1995 Před 4 lety

    thinking about upgrading my bx2680 to a deere how could I ask a few questions?

    • @TractorTimewithTim
      @TractorTimewithTim  Před 4 lety

      Best place is greentractortalk.com. More experience there than you can shake a stick at!

  • @randalmiddleton8068
    @randalmiddleton8068 Před 4 lety

    You may need to knock the top of the hills down at some point since being planted deep, then hill them back up again later on with a wide tooth cultivator. Disk are ok for planting, but not hilling...

  • @tacratt6091
    @tacratt6091 Před 3 lety

    Never seen a tater planted that way! lol, I plant mine about 16 inches apart, then I put about a heaping cup full of fertilizer between the hills. I usually plant 75 pounds, the fertilizer usually equals about the same weight as the potatoes.

  • @tvance111
    @tvance111 Před 4 lety

    Does the stabilizer bars have a locking nut? It seems like they should have something to hold them in place

    • @tvance111
      @tvance111 Před 4 lety

      And the seed potatoes that don't come up may end up being bio fertilizer. Good luck.

  • @ralphross2357
    @ralphross2357 Před 4 lety +1

    Gramma said eyes up so they can see the sun. Peas on Good Friday.

  • @nealtubbs9608
    @nealtubbs9608 Před 4 lety +1

    Tim, You were really striking out today. ROFL

  • @qcan8468
    @qcan8468 Před 4 lety +2

    Maybe a dry run or two next spring to get the tractor and its operator dialed in ...

  • @carrollthim8460
    @carrollthim8460 Před 3 lety

    nice trarler good video work gos on vinne do thing god bless &all

  • @snymat_68
    @snymat_68 Před 4 lety +1

    You guys should call this the "8 Strike" potato crop!

  • @garyfaulds2008
    @garyfaulds2008 Před 4 lety +3

    You should plant the fourth row because maybe a potato shortage from covid 19 , if you have to many potatoes you can always give them to the food bank. Just a idea.

  • @zaphodbeeblebrox6768
    @zaphodbeeblebrox6768 Před 4 lety +1

    I planted 50 pounds of Kennebeck's on 3/28 and I can find only one plant. I may have to plant them again.

  • @harrydriezen8932
    @harrydriezen8932 Před 4 lety +2

    i always roll newspaper around the potatoe to keep the dirt out of their eyes

  • @martineastburn3679
    @martineastburn3679 Před 4 lety

    Cut and place in a bowl of cement the cut side and set off to dry. Cement dries fast and protects. Eyes should be upright as the shoot grows from there and a shoot will turn around but is stronger going up. That is from Mom and Dad who planted together before WWII and afterwards. Both are flying high now.

  • @kevinbrewer2141
    @kevinbrewer2141 Před 4 lety +1

    We use old potato planter and digger. The eyes don't matter when we cut our potatoes they have to have 3 eyes. We plant ours in mid May. When we harvest ours we can the small ones and sell them at the church with all profits go to the church.

  • @VideosfromNH
    @VideosfromNH Před 4 lety +1

    Informative video. Even a video full of mistakes is as good as a video on doing it all correctly. The audio came out great when you were dropping the potatoes. Were you using a lavalier mic?