TPS Potato Reveal #7- More Sarpo Mira F2 Crosses

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  • čas přidán 9. 07. 2024
  • As the fall is rapidly turning into winter in my area, I am scrambling to harvest my True Potato Seed grown seedling potatoes. A potato reveal of this row is of particular interest to me, as many of my highest yielding seedlings from the past were the parents of the seed that produced this seedlot. I've already dug some of these in a previous video.
    The grandmother of all of these seedlings was Sarpo Mira, which is an extremely popular potato in the UK and parts of Europe. Sarpo Mira was developed by the Sarvari Trust, and is a long season, pink skinned, floury potato with extremely high yields and excellent field resistance to Late Blight. A fellow potato breeder here in the US crossed Sarpo Mira with a bulk mix of pollen from several high performing potato varieties. That Sarpo Mira X Bulk Pollen TPS was the source of the parents of this seedlot. I collected berries from the seedlings of the original mix, and saved the true potato seed as a bulk seedlot instead of collecting from individual seedlings. So there are a variety of parents in the row, and the possible fathers of each plant is completely unknown. The genetic variabilty that is possible from tetraploid Solanum tuberosum is fully evident as we dig these, as record breaking seedlings are pulled out right next to plants that yield almost nothing. The range of color is also marked, as well as shape. In the next video when we weigh these up, we will get a better sense of their flesh qualities, and what colors and textures they are showing. I am hoping very much to find some floury potatoes with great yield.
    After digging these seedlings, I've been able to weigh them to get a record of their yield, but the weigh in footage will have to be saved for another video to keep video length reasonable. I will say that 5 of the seedlings dug in this row have broken my previous record of 8 pounds. So stay tuned for a future view of that!
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Komentáře • 33

  • @BillHimmel
    @BillHimmel Před rokem +1

    Wow! Never thought that TPS could yield THAT much!

  • @1stBumbleBeeMaster
    @1stBumbleBeeMaster Před 5 lety +6

    I hope when people watch this awesome video that they will be encouraged to grow their own TPS and not believe all the rubbish on line that discourages people from doing this. Potato Fruits are toxic to eat but each one produces that many seeds that you are guaranteed to have at least some that will produce top quality potatoes. Much better then most cloned sterile types. Its fun to do and you can never ever stop learning,

  • @bigonprivacy2708
    @bigonprivacy2708 Před 27 dny

    Super impressed my man. Well done!

  • @cathywest8776
    @cathywest8776 Před 5 lety +4

    WOW!!! Great video, with large yielding potatoes from seed. Just fun to watch~

  • @torptomaten3981
    @torptomaten3981 Před 5 lety +1

    That's a really nice harvest with lots of bright reds. I'm holding my thumbs for no hollow heart!

    • @oxbowfarm5803
      @oxbowfarm5803  Před 5 lety +1

      Thansk Torp. Me not having any seedlings with hollow heart is probably like you not having any seedlings with scab right?

  • @michaelsolomon1517
    @michaelsolomon1517 Před 5 lety +2

    Great job! Impressive yields as well. Would like to give them a try in containers.

  • @esotericagriculture6643
    @esotericagriculture6643 Před 5 lety +1

    Truly amazing yields for TPS grown plants!! I hope you got everything dug before it snowed!!

    • @oxbowfarm5803
      @oxbowfarm5803  Před 5 lety +1

      You hope in vain. I am now shoveling snow then forking potatoes. Super FUN!

  • @AbellaTeacher
    @AbellaTeacher Před 3 lety

    I love this kind of thing. I don't usually grow potatoes due to limited space, but this makes me want to try a few just for the fun of discovering what I might dig up! Reminds me of helping my grandparents dig potatoes on their farm when I was a child. I wonder what these taste like, as well. Do you often get waxy-textured boiling potatoes, starchier baked-type potatoes, or something else entirely? Maybe you should do a taste-test video sometime!

  • @homestead.design
    @homestead.design Před 2 lety

    I just saw you mentioned, while watching a skillCult video. I am just starting to get interested in TPS, but I have been growing potatoes as a subsistence homesteader for quite a few years now. I recently moved to the North, North east, and only had time to build a couple small raised beds, which I prompted put my seed potatoes into. It has been such a cool/cloudy/wet year I have a bunch of fruit for the first time ever. So i am excited to see what they do.
    I would be very interested also, in perhaps purchasing/trading some of your funky varieties. I Believe strongly in sharing/propagating good growing food! See how much you are getting from these plants has me very jealous!

  • @masumayatamang1840
    @masumayatamang1840 Před 2 lety

    Thank for your Good prodution

  • @marysurbanchickengarden
    @marysurbanchickengarden Před 11 měsíci

    I planted Sarpo Mira this past spring and was excited to see the harvest, but they weren't what I had hoped. I live in the deep south so leaving them longer was not an option although I don't think it would have benefited the plants as they were pretty much dead. Hot weather set in early and potatoes don't care for 90+ with upper 70's at night.

  • @janeobida4152
    @janeobida4152 Před rokem

    Just wow..

  • @trumplostlol3007
    @trumplostlol3007 Před 3 lety

    The more your cross breed your potatoes, the more they will look like the wild form of potatoes. That is with tougher and rougher skins and inconsistent shapes. Supermarket potatoes are human selection to look good and grow fast. You are lucky cause you definitely have a long cool growing season. We had 113F in June here in zone 8b with last frost day on April 29. LOL

    • @69thPaladin
      @69thPaladin Před rokem

      this is absolutely not true. they will not look like wild potatoes at all, and they have very little of the same genetics as wild potatoes have. while they will look less like commercial potato varieties, that is entirely because commercial varieties are the roughly 1 selected variety out of 50-100,000 seedlings, evaluated for over 30 different traits. They discard anything that does not look near perfect for all of the traits they want. Unless you grow 50,000 seedlings, you can't expect to find something close to meeting all those conditions. If you don't mind selecting for very useful potatoes with less stringent requirements, you can easily find many that will do well and taste good.

    • @trumplostlol3007
      @trumplostlol3007 Před rokem

      @@69thPaladin It is the same as apples. The cross breeding of apples will give you VERY different apples than it parents. Cross breeding of potatoes will give rise to potatoes that can have very different and unpredictable characteristics than their parents. And read my comment MORE
      carefully. "The more your cross breed your potatoes, the more they will look like the wild form of potatoes."

  • @HuplesCat
    @HuplesCat Před 5 lety +1

    That is a stunning demo of yield. Impressive.
    You needed a big bucket for those! 11:45 really stunning

    • @oxbowfarm5803
      @oxbowfarm5803  Před 5 lety +1

      I'm having a pretty astounding year for seedling yields. Given that it was an extremely unusual year weather-wise, I may never see single-plant yields like this ever again.

  • @zepherzepher1228
    @zepherzepher1228 Před 4 lety

    WOW!God multiplies! What awesome abundance!

  • @trollforge
    @trollforge Před 5 lety +2

    Some really nice harvests there Tim. Hope you're going to charge the camera, weigh, and cut them...

  • @blueponyfarm1962
    @blueponyfarm1962 Před 2 lety +4

    Just wondering if you've continued your Sarpo TPS trial. You seemed to be getting some good results. I'll be starting 4th year of container-grown trials soon.

    • @ximono
      @ximono Před 9 měsíci

      Ditto. Would be nice to get an update on this experiment. What did it result in?

  • @GoneBattyBats
    @GoneBattyBats Před 3 lety +1

    Any luck getting Sarpo Mira Potatoes TPS here in USA?

  • @GoneBattyBats
    @GoneBattyBats Před rokem

    Do you have any of the original Sarpo Mira ?

  • @debgarnett2468
    @debgarnett2468 Před 5 lety

    Nice yields

  • @mx730md
    @mx730md Před 4 lety

    those yields are amazing.. wanted to ask were did you find the sarpo mira potatoes to start this in the usa ?

  • @chris9282
    @chris9282 Před 5 lety

    Hello sir I am very impressed. Im curious you said they were f2. Were they f2 TPS or f2 tubers im a little confused about this whole tps thing. Thanks

    • @oxbowfarm5803
      @oxbowfarm5803  Před 5 lety +4

      Hi Chris. It does get confusing. And calling these "Sarpo Mira crosses" is also perhaps a bit inaccurate. The F in "F1" or whatever number is a shorthand for "filial generation" so the first SEED generation after a cross is "Filial Generation 1" or "F1". So the offspring of an F1 would be "filial generation 2" and so on, and be designated as an F2, then F3, and so on till about F7 or so. Beyond seven generations they usually don't bother anymore, and F1 and F2 generations are probably the most commonly discussed in breeding in general. These plants were all grown from TPS, but the parent plants were from the F1 generation, so these are F2. Hope that makes sense.

  • @Mrsnufleupagus
    @Mrsnufleupagus Před 5 lety

    Wow, that was quite the harvests. Did that large potato variety have hollow heart? Very impressive sir:)

    • @oxbowfarm5803
      @oxbowfarm5803  Před 5 lety +2

      In the end, the two seedlings with the highest yield both had some hollow heart, the red had just a touch and the white/purple had it really badly. There were some other issues. I'll have all of that up in a few days.

    • @Mrsnufleupagus
      @Mrsnufleupagus Před 5 lety

      Thanks pal!