Plant Potatoes Like THIS For a HUGE HARVEST

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  • Опубліковано 14 кві 2024
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 215

  • @LifeUpAhead
    @LifeUpAhead Місяць тому +58

    As a new gardener I REALLY appreciate that you showed all the steps. Most say “prepare your beds” and I have no idea what that means. This was the best video. Please make more with other beds.

    • @cowboyblacksmith
      @cowboyblacksmith Місяць тому +5

      You'll love gardening so much, been at it over 30 years and every year gets more exciting. Keep it simple too and intuitive to what nature does. Cover everything with shredded leaves and grass clippings before winter and let nature amend your soil. Shredded broken down aged leaves and a decent compost is pretty much all you need believe me. Buy a bag of dried beans at the grocery store and plant a ton of them in areas you're done with. They add a lot of nitrogen to the soil and turned under and left to decompose they really make your soil much better. It's all about the soil health and not NPK and chemicals. Feed your soil and your soil will feed your plants.

    • @LifeUpAhead
      @LifeUpAhead Місяць тому

      @@cowboyblacksmith thank you for the suggestions! I live in the mountains so I don’t have access to grass clippings and leaves. Maybe straw? The beans is an idea I’ve never heard of. Very interesting.

    • @CottageontheCorner
      @CottageontheCorner Місяць тому

      The great thing about gardening is that you can get as technical or as trial and error as you want. Sometimes I do a little research on what I’m planting and sometimes I just stick things in the ground and see what happens. I don’t really like doing a lot of research, so I get mixed but usually really good results

  • @kkb0896
    @kkb0896 Місяць тому +34

    Please always show ‘the boring’ part!!! I learned so much

  • @BrendaBodwin
    @BrendaBodwin Місяць тому +3

    You might like this.. My potatoes are growing in the house right now. This year my potatoes will be grown in Amazon boxes, I have them in right now. My sweet potatoes are growing in very large pots already. 😳 They take up a lot of space, so I cant wait to be able to get them outside. Still way to cold here. My garden will be going on the road with me this year. I do road construction, and go on thecroad in May. Im going to grow around my camp trailer at the camp site. Yeppers, a traveling garden this year. But for now, my house has a trail in it that we walk through, between the boxes, pots, grow bags, buckets, and containers. Everything is growing very nicely though. 😁🤣😂

  • @amygriffith3598
    @amygriffith3598 Місяць тому +18

    Thanks! It’s helpful to know if your potato varieties are determinate or indeterminate. Determinate (kennebec is one) produce tubers at only one level, so hilling isn’t helpful. Indeterminates are the ones that can produce at more levels so hilling may be beneficial. Slowly there’s more info coming out on this and you can find lists to see which varieties are which.

  • @angusmcnaughton4570
    @angusmcnaughton4570 Місяць тому +15

    The rabbit food works best if you run it through the rabbits first ...
    rabbit farm tech tip 😎

    • @judywein3282
      @judywein3282 Місяць тому +1

      Yep! 😁

    • @hydrolyzed_liquid_collagen
      @hydrolyzed_liquid_collagen 19 днів тому

      Rabbit manure is excellent! It does not even have to age. I believe it’s a cool fertilizer rather than hot like cow manure (If I remember right lol) I just learned about that a few months ago. I am thinking about getting a few rabbits just for fertilizer lol plus my grandkids would love rabbits!

  • @stonefarmer3005
    @stonefarmer3005 Місяць тому +2

    Like everyone is saying, I like the full length of showing all the steps.

  • @MadameCasper
    @MadameCasper Місяць тому +11

    Grew potatoes last year for the 1st time & saved about a dozen to plant this year. Love growing potatoes ❤

    • @cowboyblacksmith
      @cowboyblacksmith Місяць тому +2

      I've honed my garden selection to a lot of potatoes now and love it, planted so many today. April 15th and I still have one left in the basement from last summer perfectly good for eating, they're amazing!

  • @jeannamcgregor9967
    @jeannamcgregor9967 Місяць тому +4

    If you have a farmer's market nearby you can trust those potatoes to make great inexpensive seed potatoes. ❤

  • @jaytoney3007
    @jaytoney3007 Місяць тому +6

    Here in central Alabama, the heat comes fast. Temperatures are already in the 80s. From my experience, planting time is critical to get in the best harvest. February is too Early, and April too late. The best time to plant in my area is the first week of March. I lost one plant to frost damage, but over planted with five extra plants, so no loss. My potatoes do very well with a soil PH close to neutral, 6.7. I expect to start harvesting in June.

  • @susanolson4486
    @susanolson4486 9 днів тому

    Very helpful! Thank you!

  • @gregdoh
    @gregdoh Місяць тому +1

    I bought some local, organic potatoes from the store just in time for planting this year. The week after I bought them the reds and russets were replaced with ones grown in California.

  • @dreamangelsgarden5078
    @dreamangelsgarden5078 Місяць тому +11

    I was just going to plant mine, so I'm so happy you posted this now

    • @jimmylarge1148
      @jimmylarge1148 Місяць тому +1

      Where u b?

    • @dreamangelsgarden5078
      @dreamangelsgarden5078 Місяць тому +1

      @@jimmylarge1148 Texas

    • @angusmcnaughton4570
      @angusmcnaughton4570 Місяць тому +2

      Washington... N.E.
      150# to plant .dont need a thousand 🥔.. wish I knew someone who needed some

    • @sueweathers3978
      @sueweathers3978 Місяць тому +1

      ​@@angusmcnaughton4570I'm in NE Washington! What kind do you have? I'm just north of Spokane

    • @angusmcnaughton4570
      @angusmcnaughton4570 Місяць тому

      @@sueweathers3978 Yukon golds and Pontiac reds , they have long growth on them but they plant fine . I'm by kettle falls, my side hustle this year is rototilling gardens and s3lling he1rloom s33ds !

  • @kooltube100
    @kooltube100 Місяць тому +5

    never heard of making the soil acidic for the potaotes. I just put multipurpose compost down and bung them in, they grow really well in even the worst of soils.

    • @cowboyblacksmith
      @cowboyblacksmith Місяць тому +2

      Potatoes are so self sufficient, they seem to do well no matter what. Ideally they prefer an acidic soil but truth be told I just try to give them good soil as I'm able and they thrive. I just planted a LOT of potatoes today and some in containers with just leaf compost and seaweed and I bet they go crazy! It'd be awesome to have free seaweed and free leaves to grow excellent potatoes instead of all the fancy amending.

    • @kooltube100
      @kooltube100 Місяць тому +2

      @@cowboyblacksmith first year they get really good soil just so I can get the amount of compost needed. After that I will just amend the soil for he year after. at the end of the day I use as little amendments as possible. Potatoes are cheap to buy so you kinda want to keep the costs down. Adding acidity seems like a waste of money to me

  • @ndbg46881
    @ndbg46881 Місяць тому +1

    I have 4' X '8 foot raised beds and I use a bed preparation rake (from Johnny's seeds - Elliot Coleman design - bought a long time ago) to make trenches parallel to the long sides. I space my seed potatoes 1 foot apart with 2 rows 2' apart. Then tuck in a few seed potatoes in the middle. I find that this gives me more medium size potatoes rather than huge ones. I "hill" with Norfleet superfine soil conditioner which is a little acidic. It breaks down and adds depth to my beds after a year or so.

  • @pager1962
    @pager1962 Місяць тому +3

    Mine are already pushed out in my grow bags. Central Indiana, probably a few weeks ahead of you folks in Michigan.

  • @northsidedork_3043
    @northsidedork_3043 Місяць тому +1

    I use the Ruth Stout method for potatoes and i absolutely love it. It is so simple, so simple, i dont have to worry about the back breaking planting or harvesting.

  • @Peoniesandpinks
    @Peoniesandpinks Місяць тому +2

    This video is perfect timing as I got my seed potatoes this weekend

  • @Ps2352
    @Ps2352 Місяць тому +7

    My concern is the alfalfa pellets. A lot of crops are grown commercially with spraying glyphosate which is a weed inhibitor. It doesn’t break down easily and can carryover into other plants. ???

    • @terigeorge5545
      @terigeorge5545 Місяць тому +1

      I’ve been using alfalfa pellets from Tractor Supply for three years and have seen just the opposite, ‘Jurassic Park’ growth. 😊. But I apply it in late fall so the snow and rain break it down by spring planting.

    • @TheOnlyKontrol
      @TheOnlyKontrol Місяць тому +1

      Just get it from a trusted source…also doesn’t need to be pellets. I get a bag of ground alfalfa meal and it works great.

  • @PorchGardeningWithPassion
    @PorchGardeningWithPassion Місяць тому +1

    Good stuff Luke! I had no idea they needed a PH that low. Thanks again for the daily tips 👊🏻🌻👊🏻

  • @JeanneKinland
    @JeanneKinland Місяць тому +2

    Planting potatoes! That is what I'm doing today now that I finally received my grow bags that I ordered from MI Gardener. I'm planning to amend my soil with peat moss and compost. Teach me how to do it right Luke. I have some old wood chips that have been rotten down after sitting out for the past year.

  • @melissagoodwin2602
    @melissagoodwin2602 Місяць тому

    Right on time!

  • @terrivance8750
    @terrivance8750 Місяць тому

    Thank you, Luke. 😊

  • @brokenmeats5928
    @brokenmeats5928 Місяць тому +1

    I love ALL MIgardener videos!

  • @karen15061
    @karen15061 Місяць тому

    Truly appreciate your how to videos!

  • @PepperplacewithShawna
    @PepperplacewithShawna Місяць тому

    Great video. Thanks!

  • @brucegarrison4999
    @brucegarrison4999 Місяць тому

    Thank you Luke

  • @charmsurprise
    @charmsurprise Місяць тому

    as always, you are encouraging me to 'get out there' and do it. thanks for all your efforts.

  • @ilovemichigan-1111
    @ilovemichigan-1111 Місяць тому +9

    I planted my potatoes yesterday. Go figure now I get to see all of the things I did wrong 😂😅

    • @jimmylarge1148
      @jimmylarge1148 Місяць тому

      Where u located in mi?

    • @ilovemichigan-1111
      @ilovemichigan-1111 Місяць тому

      ​@@jimmylarge1148 I am in the Atlanta area.

    • @jenniferrescott1149
      @jenniferrescott1149 Місяць тому

      I was going to plant yesterday fortunately it rained😂

    • @cowboyblacksmith
      @cowboyblacksmith Місяць тому

      Potatoes are so forgiving, they just grow. Ideal soil, ph, amendments and all that are nice and all but I swear they just grow no matter what.

  • @diannemiller4754
    @diannemiller4754 Місяць тому +3

    Questions for you Luke. When will you plant your tomatoes and peppers? My area in Clare michigan last projected frost date is May 19th. I don't usually plant until 1st week of June for tomatoes and 2nd week for peppers. I will be growing them in raised beds for the first time.

    • @cowboyblacksmith
      @cowboyblacksmith Місяць тому +2

      You're wise to wait for warmer weather for tomatoes and peppers. They make up for lost time and grow better than if they get stunted in cooler weather.

    • @Nikki-mx5my
      @Nikki-mx5my Місяць тому +1

      ​@cowboyblacksmit I agree! I plant my tomatoes and peppers once nighttime temperatures are consistently 50 or higher, especially the peppers which love heat even more than the tomatoes.

    • @shirelife_
      @shirelife_ Місяць тому +1

      im in illinois. I plant may 15 or so. Been growing two pound heirloom tomatoes for years

  • @PolyonthePrairie1
    @PolyonthePrairie1 Місяць тому

    Aleays coming in at the perfect time. Getting ready to plant potatoes this week!

  • @soulseeker311
    @soulseeker311 Місяць тому

    Thank you for finally discussing ph levels in your soil

  • @marycountry
    @marycountry Місяць тому

    Good Morning Luke😊

  • @phungktk533
    @phungktk533 Місяць тому

    Just in time for planting our potato seeds for the first time. Thanks for the tip!!

  • @kathryncarty1629
    @kathryncarty1629 Місяць тому

    Thanks for this video on potatoes 🥔. This answered a few questions of mine.

  • @sandrabitting6821
    @sandrabitting6821 17 днів тому

    Just checking in to see if you will be open on Friday the 24th of May?

  • @jacquelinelafay647
    @jacquelinelafay647 Місяць тому +1

    Serendipity! I just bought a set of purple seed potatoes yesterday. I'm going to try to grow them in 20 gal garden bags. Great video, thanks!

  • @MyGardenRetreat
    @MyGardenRetreat Місяць тому

    Thank you for the tips! I just started my own vegetable garden channel.

  • @crazy8skml
    @crazy8skml Місяць тому +1

    Something told me to throw that rabbit food into my garden. 😂 Absolutely LOVE this content. Can’t wait to get my last set of seeds for the year today.

  • @1288samson
    @1288samson Місяць тому +2

    I was just about to go out and till my potato bed here in NE Ohio, can't plant most of my garden yet because I don't live on top of a magma chamber like you Michiganites. The middle of May is our earliest which I've learned the hard way.
    I plant mine a little deeper, about 6" maybe it's just the video illusion but yours look a little shallow, watch out for greening. I also use the trifecta along with sulpher, works well. Thanks for the update

    • @jimmylarge1148
      @jimmylarge1148 Місяць тому

      We live on a magma chamber? Never heard such a claim b4.

    • @steve5013
      @steve5013 Місяць тому

      Gander's

  • @debrak.6430
    @debrak.6430 Місяць тому

    Also....how often do you water And fertilize? Just one fertilization at planting??

  • @debkincaid2891
    @debkincaid2891 Місяць тому +2

    This was immensely helpful. I now recognize some of the mistakes I made with my potatoes last year. And my potatoes should be arriving soon. I'd better order some Trifecta! Thanks for the video. 😍

  • @mikemiller209
    @mikemiller209 Місяць тому +1

    I prefer to plant when there's not going to be any rain for a few days so they'll take root before starting to rot with too much rain... and never plant in soil that's too wet to till

  • @austinlynn966
    @austinlynn966 Місяць тому +2

    I wouldn’t worry too much about soil acidity. My potatoes did great with just compost

    • @cowboyblacksmith
      @cowboyblacksmith Місяць тому

      Mine crank in compost! I have incredible potatoes with just leaf compost and seaweed believe it or not. Seaweed has so much great micro nutrients from the ocean and it is such an excellent green for making compost any time of the year. I'm lucky to only be 20 minutes from the ocean so always have a lot of seaweed to make fermented seaweed fertilizer, compost, and mulch. Seaweed and leaves, free and fantastic stuff for the dirt.

  • @whatnow8362
    @whatnow8362 Місяць тому

    Great tips! I think that’s why my potato haul wasnt as good last year. I didn’t lower the pH enough.

  • @robertcotrell9810
    @robertcotrell9810 Місяць тому +1

    You should try to track what you put in vs what you get out.
    It's so interesting to see all the different methods utilized throughout UA-cam. I think potatoes are a bit divisive in that way.

  • @marktoldgardengnome4110
    @marktoldgardengnome4110 Місяць тому

    Whether you hill or not, a healthy amount of straw mulch will keep your spuds,
    growing near the surface, from turning green from sun exposure. Also, that mulch
    will help with keeping your soil damp between watering.
    From what I've read, potatoes require an inch of water per week. Including rain.

  • @cheryllariccia2332
    @cheryllariccia2332 Місяць тому

    This is my first year planting just the potato eyes. I came across a few videos saying this was possible (who would have thunk? 😂) and so far my 14 eyes are growing really well! I still need to move them into their summer homes but I’m liking this experiment and the potatoes I snagged them from are already producing me a second set of eyes!

  • @vickycollins6656
    @vickycollins6656 Місяць тому

    How much water do potatoes? When to apply sulfur?

  • @ronaldclemons5520
    @ronaldclemons5520 Місяць тому

    Nice job. We always hill our potatoes. Our yields are always really good. We have not put them in a raised bed. Maybe try that this year. Blessings

  • @teebob21
    @teebob21 Місяць тому +1

    Trench cultivation is optimal in raised bed. In my in-ground beds where I am blessed with TOO MUCH room to grow, I find Herrick Kimball's mound cultivation method works best for me with our heavy native clay.

  • @rambette6580
    @rambette6580 Місяць тому

    Ok, so you water them in well after planting. After that, approx how often would you water them?

  • @lisawarren8666
    @lisawarren8666 Місяць тому

    I’m so glad you posted this video because I’m getting ready to start planting my garden and I’m growing potatoes and I never knew you didn’t have to hill them up and I’m going to use one of my raised beds for them. I normally plant them in the ground or in 5 gallon buckets.

  • @kathrynam1
    @kathrynam1 Місяць тому

    Thank you for the great information! :) What other crops would we want to add alfalfa to the Trifecta? (Just nightshade family?)

  • @onceuponagal
    @onceuponagal Місяць тому

    Is aluminum sulphate equivalent to sulphur to bring down pH?

  • @ameliemorton9849
    @ameliemorton9849 Місяць тому

    thank you having grown potatoes for years, I find your instructive video so helpful...A volunteer potato last year produced an unusual number of potatoes, WARBA was the variety, the flavour of this potato was really good, as was texture..so soil was undisturbed, but clearly very healthy and nutritious, supporting a variety of flowers and vegetables in the preceding years...Pacific west coast salt spring island

  • @bobvolsario1224
    @bobvolsario1224 Місяць тому +2

    Thank you for the comments about crop rotation. I have a small garden so crop rotating isn’t really an option

    • @amyschmelzer6445
      @amyschmelzer6445 Місяць тому +1

      My problem is that we love nightshades. Well over 50% of my garden each season is in nightshades. I couldn’t even do a two year rotation of nightshades with the rest of the crops much less the four or more years that people recommend.

    • @roelven1282
      @roelven1282 Місяць тому

      use grow bags or containers... then rotation is no issue

    • @cowboyblacksmith
      @cowboyblacksmith Місяць тому

      Nature never crop rotates, ever see a forest move? lol. Good healthy soil is the key to everything, tons of microbes and bacteria and fungi, yummy!

    • @TheOnlyKontrol
      @TheOnlyKontrol Місяць тому

      @@roelven1282but rotation isn’t a issue to begin with as he mentions in the video 😅

  • @christophergetchell6490
    @christophergetchell6490 Місяць тому

    Got my 'taders in a couple of weeks ago, just waiting for them all to sprout now! I did Yukon Gold, Pontiac Red, and Adirondack Blue! I did rotate my garden, it's just something I've always been taught. I also like having no two gardens being quite the same year to year!

  • @SilverSaabArc
    @SilverSaabArc Місяць тому

    Almost all of my veggies are prone to the same types of blight because they are all from the nightshade family (peppers, tomatoes, potatoes, and eggplant). I have very limited full sun exposure so the greens are always grown in the partial shade, and the nightshade always stay in the in full sun beds. I haven't experienced much blight, and I'm glad.

  • @lauriebieda4498
    @lauriebieda4498 Місяць тому

    Please keep going through the season,what state you are in,so we know for our area when it’s time,please,you’re so helpful

    • @sherry2836
      @sherry2836 Місяць тому +1

      The MI in MIgardener stands for Michigan.

  • @sandrafletcher5179
    @sandrafletcher5179 Місяць тому

    I planted my potatoes 8" deep on good friday and they have not started coming up yet at least that I can see How long will it take for them to come How long will it take for them to come up above ground thank you

  • @mflynnnj1
    @mflynnnj1 21 день тому

    Question: My seed potatoes are green, can I use them? Thanks

  • @lindyconner7998
    @lindyconner7998 Місяць тому

    Question: I used the method you showed of cutting the potato eyes and using honey and putting in egg cartons for 2 weeks. I also used store bought potatoes.🤷‍♀️ I may have messed up. Also, its a new raised bed and I used peat moss and sulfer. Is that ok? Thanks. Learning process!

  • @meganwhite7652
    @meganwhite7652 Місяць тому

    Where did you purchase the seed potatoes from?

  • @leelaural
    @leelaural Місяць тому

    mistake I have made is I don't think I had enough soil under the potatoes...someone on you tube said you only need 6 inches or so but this year I made sure there was a foot of soil under them....

  • @IAMGiftbearer
    @IAMGiftbearer Місяць тому

    Good information! I hope you will be selling seed potatoes this year! I can't find them here.

  • @hybridhomestead2522
    @hybridhomestead2522 Місяць тому

    What about Indian Trail Compost, would you still suggest getting compost from them?

  • @timothyshanley1132
    @timothyshanley1132 Місяць тому

    Hey Luke, how do you like that Vulcan wheel barrow? I picked up similar from Ace hardware and the tub broke second season. They do t sell replacement tub, so I have to replace.thx Tim

  • @markspann
    @markspann Місяць тому

    How far apart were you planting them Luke? Looked to be somewhere between 8 and 10 inches, but hard to tell from the video.

  • @pinehavenhomestead
    @pinehavenhomestead Місяць тому

    I’m trying to figure out where you’ve found that potatoes like “acidic” soil?

  • @debrak.6430
    @debrak.6430 Місяць тому

    Can you grow potatoes in a raised hugelculture bed?

  • @CottageontheCorner
    @CottageontheCorner Місяць тому

    Random question, I have a small outdoor pond with goldfish that I’m going to empty, clean and put new water in, but I know that kind of green water has a lot of nutrients. Which plants do you think would benefit from them. I don’t even know exactly what nutrients would be in a pond that has goldfish and some algae

  • @DJCharlesworth
    @DJCharlesworth Місяць тому

    OMG...thank you about crop rotation!!! I've grown tomatoes and peppers along my garage for 13 years and have never had a problem. Every year, add some new soil to the bed, mix it in and you're done. Of course I don't get down to the science you have but I've never had an issue.

  • @GrownsFamilyFarm
    @GrownsFamilyFarm Місяць тому

    Luke! You’re a day late! I just planted my potatoes this morning 😂😂. Awesome info as always!

  • @K_Rich_1983
    @K_Rich_1983 Місяць тому

    I’m in central Michigan. Just put some raised beds in. Getting my soil and compost this weekend.
    Ordered seed potatoes awhile ago but still waiting to receive them. Holand bulb farm ships based on zone and I am 5B so I would bet them the ground soon.

  • @sirpainter1
    @sirpainter1 Місяць тому

    Actually I've learned a lot from you. & Not just potatoes which I love growing. But there seems to be a food shortage in my favorite dumpster. That's where I got my potatoes. So I bought some organics. Desperate times=Desperate measures.

  • @colleenbow777
    @colleenbow777 Місяць тому +6

    What happened with the potatoes you planted in the grow bag?

  • @deltorres2100
    @deltorres2100 Місяць тому

    Yes I really don’t crop rotation either.. so I’m on my third batch of potatoes and I will be getting another one started soon fingerlings but I don’t want to say I crop rotate, but I cause I do my potatoes in those big massive buckets and they’re very big there for trees so I will do actually a good double layer of them and they work out good potatoes

  • @traceybier1128
    @traceybier1128 Місяць тому

    Can you tell me when is the best time to plant in Zone 6a? I'd love to try potatoes soon.

    • @TheNakidGardeners
      @TheNakidGardeners Місяць тому +1

      After your last frost and when your soil is above 55 degrees. At least that is what we go by

  • @mandyglynn1538
    @mandyglynn1538 Місяць тому

    Do you have a suggestion for a substitution for peat moss? I have used coconut husk before, does that help contribute to soil acidity like peat moss?

    • @cowboyblacksmith
      @cowboyblacksmith Місяць тому

      Coconut isn't acidic like peat moss is. Honestly, don't fret over the acidity of your soil for potatoes. As long as you add good stuff like compost they'll do great. Way too much emphasis on UA-cam for the exact ideal conditions for plants and not enough emphasis on building microbial rich living soil.

  • @marymccue8455
    @marymccue8455 Місяць тому

    Any advice for container potatoes? I'm growing Kennebecs in 15 gallon growbags.

    • @cowboyblacksmith
      @cowboyblacksmith Місяць тому +1

      I just planted a bunch of grow bag Kennebec’s today and a 33 foot row as well. I mix 50/50 soil and peat moss and throw in some good compost if it's ready and a handful of alfalfa horse feed pellets I always have on hand. I put about four inches of "soil" in the bag, then two or three potatoes and add a small handful of Epsoma granular "Tomato-tone" organic fertilizer and bone meal and tickle that in. Then fill the bag almost all the way up and put some shredded leaves or some kind of mulch and water them in. Grow bags are great but one thing you have to be aware of is watering them enough, they tend to dry out but I just love them. I grew potatoes in mine last year and peppers this year.

    • @marymccue8455
      @marymccue8455 Місяць тому

      @@cowboyblacksmith do you then add more soil as they leaf out?

  • @moniquewendt5266
    @moniquewendt5266 Місяць тому

    Question: I have potatoes that are sprouting from last years hatvest that were in storage.Like really sprouting. Some over 12 inches, I'm just now able to plant potatoes in my zone. Can I plant these and if so how? Do I bury that long sprout? Do I leave it sticking out? Help?

  • @brucewilliams359
    @brucewilliams359 Місяць тому

    Hello from Hersey, MI
    What about Japanese beetles and potatoes? We cover our 25' bed with netting. Is that all we can do? Love the channel.

    • @ericawhitfield9289
      @ericawhitfield9289 Місяць тому

      Ever tried one of those Japanese beetle bag catchers. It attracts and traps them. The bag fills up fast!

  • @79PoisonBreaker
    @79PoisonBreaker Місяць тому

    Just like tomatoes, potatoes are determinant or indeterminant. some potatoes will produce more when hilled if they are indeterminant. most varieties are determinant and do not need extra hilling.

  • @jimmylarge1148
    @jimmylarge1148 Місяць тому +4

    Luke im in traverse city Should I plant my potatoes yet too!!????

    • @ladyapprentice7095
      @ladyapprentice7095 Місяць тому +2

      I'm in Traverse City too and wondering the same thing.

    • @jimmylarge1148
      @jimmylarge1148 Місяць тому +4

      @@ladyapprentice7095I talked to mcgoughs and they said to wait till end of month but I don’t wanna!! 😂😂

    • @ladyapprentice7095
      @ladyapprentice7095 Місяць тому

      @@jimmylarge1148 Funny, I got my potato seeds from them. I love McGoughs!

    • @acoastalrv4582
      @acoastalrv4582 Місяць тому +1

      I'm in Alpena and wondering the same

    • @jimmylarge1148
      @jimmylarge1148 Місяць тому +1

      @@acoastalrv4582 looks like Luke’s not gonna talk to us 😂

  • @not1moreinch332
    @not1moreinch332 Місяць тому

    Some gardeners believe with every ounce of their being that you have to hill your potatoes or your harvest will be lackluster. In my soil and climate in NE Oklahoma i cant tell any difference between hilling or not hilling. For every pound of seed potatoes i plant i get 10-12 pounds of potatoes depending on the variety but hilling has zero effect

  • @jennt111
    @jennt111 Місяць тому

    The monsters inc reference cracked me up!😂 Wasn’t it Mike who sang that though? Anyway, helpful and funny video.

  • @danadeaton9596
    @danadeaton9596 Місяць тому

    Luke which is best to use the pellets or the grass?

    • @cowboyblacksmith
      @cowboyblacksmith Місяць тому

      Pellets are great and you can cover them with water and they turn to powder for even mixing in the soil. I buy mine in a big bag at Tractor supply as horse feed.

  • @Talula72
    @Talula72 Місяць тому

    Long time viewer here. Great, informative video. A suggestion is for the person behind the camera to move slower. Today's video seemed especially "wobbly" and it can be hard on the eyes.

  • @brianmoore4299
    @brianmoore4299 Місяць тому

    Thank you for including that potatoes like acidic soil. Mine is always closer to neutral. I use a lot of compost. With the thought being towards nutrition. I'll give more thought to that in my next planting of potatoes.

    • @cowboyblacksmith
      @cowboyblacksmith Місяць тому

      I added some of the acidifier fertilizer from Epsoma last year but truth be told, didn’t notice any change. Sulfur is an easy addition but just takes a while to break down. Lots of good compost and you can’t go wrong.

    • @brianmoore4299
      @brianmoore4299 Місяць тому

      @@cowboyblacksmith I'm with you on that. I've never been really disappointed with my harvest either. I just thought maybe next planting in one of my beds I'd try it his way and another my way and see if it differs in any way. Kind of like what you did. I've never done it so at least once can't hurt. I will be growing others. Thanks for your comment.

  • @debbiemusgrove676
    @debbiemusgrove676 Місяць тому

    What if my potatoes have a 12 inch growth. Can I just pinch them back and plant them?

  • @beverlyr8152
    @beverlyr8152 Місяць тому

    Yikes. The soil I already planted my wee potatoes in is 7.0. How can I make it more acidic now??? Thanks love this video. 😊

    • @MIgardener
      @MIgardener  Місяць тому +1

      Just add some powdered sulfur on top.

    • @beverlyr8152
      @beverlyr8152 Місяць тому

      @@MIgardener will do, thanks!

  • @lefthandedarcher2126
    @lefthandedarcher2126 16 днів тому

    I definitely believe in hilling up my potatoes seems like they grow better

  • @ronalddavis5905
    @ronalddavis5905 Місяць тому

    Luke, I forgot do you get bigger potatoes from whole ones or cut ones?

    • @cowboyblacksmith
      @cowboyblacksmith Місяць тому +1

      It's more about how many eyes they have. Each eye will generate one stalk so two to three eyes is best per potato or potato piece. Some people will even remove sprouts if there's more than three. Bigger yield potatoes have more to do with ample room. Fewer potatoes in a grow bag will give you bigger ones but not as many. More potatoes in a grow bag will give you more potatoes but smaller new potato sized ones. Same thing in the ground, more space equals bigger potatoes but not as many and more closely spaced potatoes will give you more but smaller potatoes. Cutting won't make potatoes smaller for yields but they just need to have a few chits and a decent amount of raw potato for the energy to get going.

  • @goodnessineverybite2378
    @goodnessineverybite2378 Місяць тому +1

    Is it the same alfalfa pellets you feed rabbits? If not what are you using?

    • @cowboyblacksmith
      @cowboyblacksmith Місяць тому

      I get mine at Tractor supply in a big bag and it's horse feed- pellets not cubes though. Cover them with water and they quickly turn to powder and are so much better to add to soil that way. They're great to scatter in late fall and early spring to break down and just be ready.

  • @sparkleflair
    @sparkleflair Місяць тому

    Nice tutorial on getting the beds prepped, thanks! Oh, LOVE Monsters, Inc.!! :D

  • @msmelody5641
    @msmelody5641 Місяць тому

    What if I’ve already planted my potatoes and they are coming up. Should I add some sulfur powder at this point? Or is it too late?

    • @cowboyblacksmith
      @cowboyblacksmith Місяць тому +2

      The sulfur actually takes a while to break down to acidify soil and/or become plant uptake available, longer than what takes the potatoes to grow. If your soil is decent no worries. I mean realistically you may only be talking about a meal or two more anyway. Ideal everything is great in a lab, but in nature it's not the end all. If you add sulphur early spring well before you could plant it'd be better, and the best is to add sulphur in the fall to let it break down completely over the winter. Potatoes may ideally prefer an acidic soil, prefer and not require. If your soil is decent they'll do great. Better to build a healthy living soil rich in microbial goodness than fret over the exact ph. I have grown great potatoes without ever knowing anything about soil acidity for them.

    • @msmelody5641
      @msmelody5641 Місяць тому

      @@cowboyblacksmith thank you!

  • @Saoirse.n.Murphy
    @Saoirse.n.Murphy Місяць тому

    Hi Luke, our potatoes are ready, but with healthy sprouts that I'm wondering if night Temps still too low at night in the Berkshires, MA zone 5b. Mid to high 30s at night. Yours seem just budding but these are ready to open lol. Too early?

    • @Saoirse.n.Murphy
      @Saoirse.n.Murphy Місяць тому

      Update... the potatoes are in! Ty!

    • @cowboyblacksmith
      @cowboyblacksmith Місяць тому

      Not too early at all. I live in NH and plant mine a month before anticipated last frost. As long as they're underground they'll be happy. Even if they popped out and got frost bit they'll pop up new growth. I have potatoes that I didn't see last year when I dug that froze solid as a rock over the winter. Those buggers are sprouting eyes and growing already, found a few when I turned under my soil today for planting my seed potatoes. The earlier the better for potatoes.

  • @bruce3579
    @bruce3579 Місяць тому

    No nutrients to be placed in the holes with them??

  • @sstag83
    @sstag83 Місяць тому

    What about coffee grounds?

    • @cowboyblacksmith
      @cowboyblacksmith Місяць тому

      Coffee grounds are great in soil but as grounds are pretty neutral ph. The worms love them and they add nitrogen. PH is great and all but nothing I fret over. As long as I add a variety of good stuff to my soil everything is happy.

  • @nanablue3748
    @nanablue3748 Місяць тому

    💚💚💚