Thank you for watching my content. If you enjoyed this video you can view more like it here ---> ua-cam.com/video/6FzHYrQKlnw/v-deo.html Don't forget to like and share my content. Thanks, guys :)
My Grandpa used to grow lots of potatoes every year. He would harvest them in August/September. He had an old used chest freezer that he buried in the ground up to the lid and he would put a layer of straw on the floor of the freezer. He would place the potato harvest on the straw and close the lid which was cracked open slightly with a stick for ventilation, and then cover it up with some straw and canvas. The potatoes would keep just fine this way well into the following summer. Oh, and by the way, he lived to the ripe old age of 99! :)
I wonder if they were just stored in a freezer chest (with the lid propped open a bit for ventilation) in an unheated garage, if it would do the same, maybe just cover the chest with a blanket to avoid freezing?
My grandfather used to make his "potato lasagna" with clean sand instead of straw. This way there is no decomposition risk from the straw and if one did start to rot the sand would "clot" up any moisture preventing it from spreading. The other benefit is you can reuse the sand over and over
Best vids out there. Minimal chit chat about irrelevant stuff, clear, concise, visual, enunciated well, broadly applicable. You certainly know your audience. Bravo.
Thanks Sam. Its taken me a while to learn to cut out the crap. I am glad you notice the effort that goes into them. Cheers for your comment, you made my day
Right! I just watched a video where she recorded her dog for 4 minutes and then her CLEANING THE ENTIRE GREENHOUSE of all the trash she left laying around before she even started on the topic.
The gophers taught me the best way I’ve ever seen to store potatoes. I left some potatoes in a small pile on the dirt floor of my root cellar. Gophers discovered the empty space that the root cellar creates in the ground and used it as a dumping site for the dirt they removed to make their tunnels. Their dump site just happened to be right above the pile of potatoes and so my potatoes ended up being covered with about 8” of dirt. We were gone for a long period of time so when I discovered what had happened, the potatoes had been in my very dark cellar for a year. When I removed the dirt off of the potatoes I was shocked to find that the potatoes were just as firm and moist as the day I dug them with zero sprouting! I live in zone 5.
@@simplifygardening Thank you for saying this. Couldn't I just drag the containers into a garage and dig up the potatoes whenever I need them for dinner? Would they store in the dirt if not disturbed?
Been using 5 gallon buckets with holes drilled all around for air movement and kept in a dark room at approximately 3 to 5 degrees Celsius and have had my potatoes last into april. Saves real estate.
I'm older but I remember my mother having a potato bin in the basement. It was a 36in. x 24in. and was made out of trellis wood. with about an inch between each slat. Even on the bottom. There was no top. It sat on 2 bricks to add to air circulation for the bottom potatoes. I really like your instruction and plain to follow it. Thank you for taking the time to explain each process. Oh...The bin was about 30in. high.
Tony, Smart people know. Brilliant people teach. Kind people share. All are potential life changing attributes to many of us, but I suspect to you it's just another day. Thanks for sharing your knowledge and kindness.
Thanks for such a nice comment Larry. That means the world to me. The comments is where I get my thanks for the videos. I love to interact with you folks. its a perfect trade :)
@@simplifygardening thank you so much.i know it's a podcast from 2 years but so grateful for your kind knowledge. Just grown ours for the first time and was looking at how to store them..they are telling us we will have food shortages as bad as ww2.msm that is.
@@maryneavyn8734 We are going to see shortages like most of us have never seen before. growing your own will become more important as money becomes very tight
Here it is 2021, and I'm an experienced gardener. But, when people like you make awesome, educational videos like these, I realize that the learning process never ends. Thank you so much for your very useful tips!! Liked, subscribed and hit the bell :-)
Cheers mate. I only try to help. I love UA-cam as its perfect for sharing ideas and knowledge that is hard to articulate in writing it down, They say a picture paints a 1000 words, WOnder what video does?
I learned that if you leave the potatoes in the ground for two additional weeks after the plant dies back, the potatoes skin is thicker and will preserve better. Time for an experiment. :)
I can't thank you enough for sharing this gold mine of information. I have been terrified about the future, as I'm sure everyone else has too, at some point. You, and people like you here on You Tube are helping me feel a little more in control and less afraid. Day by day. I hope this message finds you and yours, including your viewers, safe, healthy and well. Cheers and gratitude from Texas!
Hi Kristin, We are all good here. Yes food security is on everyones minds atm. Did you see my latest video on potatoes? I think it will be of interest ua-cam.com/video/hgJa2wrX6lA/v-deo.html
Folks if you have any questions I am more than happy to help. Please help this video get noticed by clicking the thumbs up and also sharing is caring :) Are you storing potatoes this year? how are you doing it? If your new here don't forget to subscribe. Look forward to chatting with you all during the premier :)
Recommended by UA-cam in time to store potatoes to get my daughter and myself through the Coronavirus lockdown. 😂 Finally! UA-cam gave a good recommendation!
I learned from an old priest here in Ireland that the newest thinking on seed potato storage is to simply place them in a container open to the light all during the winter thereby allowing the potato to develop a greenish skin which not only acts like a pesticide but inhibits the activity of mould or bacteria which would otherwise rot the potato during the winter. I tried it this year and went ahead and placed a selection of potatoes from last year in a plastic container like your blue tray in the video and left it out on the table in my shed all winter. When I wanted to plant up this year they were ready chitted at the right time. I was so impressed that's why I'm sharing it with you. Incidentially, the old priest was someone who taught horticulture within the order called the salesians
I want to thank you for this video on storing potatoes. I just stores my potatoes by putting them in a cardboard box with newspaper between layers. You have showed me a better way in this video that I plan to follow this year. Thank you again.
I was planning on par boiling a lot of mine and freezing them but now I’ll try your ideas! Thanks! I’m in the US and just emptied 2 pots and have 16 pounds of the things!!
Just recently learned about the Ruth Stout method, and saw it working very well for potatoes. Haven't tried it for my self, but it looks very promising. No digging, no weeding, very little watering, and very little chance of damaging the potato skin. HIGHLY recommend looking into it to see if it's right for you.
I love the way he explains things, clearly, in detail, gives reasons why. I watched other potato tutorials & this is the best one by far, I truly learned what to do now with what I have & am going to put his teachings into practice this coming Spring. So many important points were made which other tutorials left out! And he gives 3 ways to store instead of just one. This is valuable, about how not to throw, bruise, damage the skin of our precious roots. About moisture, growing in pots if you wish, shows how to do it. I love this!
You're still the best Tony! My wife and I have been preparing our RoofTop Garden Sanctuary again this year, and we ended up making 4 separate containers full of various potato SEED. Well they're all doing very well, as the plants are popped out and growing large and rapidly. So she asked me to check out PROPER ways to preserve our potato harvest when they're finally ready. Thanks for the tips Tony! "Hay/Potato Lasagna!" GREAT description!👍
I learned a lot from this! I live in Qld Australia summertime I have to refrigerate our potato supply that I buy in a bulk 5 kg bag, sufficient stock for household of only 2 of us. Cooler seasons they can survive unrefrigerated. Anyone who wants to know how to prolong your potatoes in the fridge vege compartment. If you place a few fresh Granny Smith apples bin with your potatoes they last forever without spoiling and spreading. Can’t use any other apples, must be Granny Smith. Can be applied to home grown potatoes too but thought I’d put it out there for large families that buy in bulk who experience in hot climate seasons and their potatoes spoiling in fridge. You won’t lose a single potato stored in your fridge vege crisper to spoiling. Just don’t store in the bags you purchased them in. Remember only Granny Smith apples.love you videos Tony, especially your containing growing tutorial with the wooden grow support K& irrigation, so many handy suggestions in comments from others offering their suggestions to store when I eventually grow my own. It’s wonderful that we all contribute ideas to solve issues & concerns. Thanks everyone!
This is the best instructional video I have seen on this process - how to handle them & be gentle so the skins ego to get damaged. Also love the instructions on how to store seed potatoes for next season, thank you!
Thank you so much! I’ve only just begun to learn about food preservation. It’s such comfort to find so many loving people openly sharing what they know in such informative yet concise ways. I’m truly grateful, thank you.
Excellent information. I remember all the backyard gardens in Liverpool when I was married to an English girl and visiting her Mum. Now I understand why the British are such earnest gardeners. Subbed!
I am trying to store my seed potatoes for the first time this year. I appreciate the storage wrapping advice. Living in South Florida I have to store them over summer rather than winter as planting season for potatoes is Oct-Apr. I have a large commercial refrigerator that doesn't dehumidify like regular ones. I'm hopeful your techniques will help get them through.
Greetings from New Zealand. I discovered your channel a few days ago, and wow! Sooooo much I didn't know about potatoes. Now I know why I always had lots of leaves and few tubers (wrong kind of fertilizer), and never had success with mounding (turns out all the varieties I grow are determinates - didn't even know that was a thing). My success has been so minimal, I didn't even bother with them last year. I had pretty much given up on growing spuds. Thanks to your fabulous videos, I will grow them again this year! And not waste my very limited garden space doing it either (6 beds of 900mm x 900mm) - I'm going to do them in containers. Thank you so much for all the time and effort you put into doing these wonderful videos 😊
Dana, firstly, welcome to the channel. Secondly I hope you do try again because I grew them this way when I lived in Australia so you can definitely do it too
maybe they need less nitrogen and/or more potassium? or a lighter soil? I just watched a Russian planting video showing that hard-wood ash, which is high in potassium, is sprinkled aound the potatoes before pushing dirt over them.
Thank you, Tony! Your video was very helpful to me. I have two relatively small raised garden beds and I try to grow as much as I can in the space I have. But digging the potatoes up without disturbing the other plants just complicated the harvesting process. I will definitely grow my potatoes in containers starting with my next crop!
Thank you for your very helpful video. I've had success growing spuds this year (2019). I grew them in bags and have been harvesting a bag each week for consumption. It is now the end of August and I need to think about how to store the spuds, which I have learnt now. Thank you also for the tip on how to keep spuds for sowing in the new season. I have grown Maris Piper, Jerseys, Charlottes, which are the best so far. The Red Duke of Yorks are also fine. I have yet to harvest the King Edwards. I have just sowed a batch of Nicola and will soon sow more Charlottes which I had bought for Christmas crop. But it sounds like one does not harvest spuds for Christmas because if there is frost, the crop will not materialise. So it looks like I'll have to get a move on and get these spuds in and harvest them before the frost sets in. Thank you once again.
Yes you can hammer ideas around at the point of a video and it lets me converse with you guys in real time. I really enjoyed it tonight, Makes me feel part of it too
Thanks for this video. I live in the Annapolis Valley of Nova Scotia. I store my potatoes and beets in damp peat moss. Take a 5 G pail and put a plastic garbage bag inside. Load some damp, not dry or wet peat moss in, then stagger a layer of spuds. Add more peat. Layer all the way to the top. Then place a 3" tube [a few empty cardboard toilet rolls work] in the top and twist tie the plastic bag around the tube. The peat regulates the moisture in the spuds through the tube, allowing more damp air in and overly damp air out. I've been able to have potatoes edible for between 8- 9 months. The beets I've been able to store with this method for up to 13 months! Carrots don't like this.
When you are talking about the the part, do you mean that tube is uncovered like a hole or you tie the bag over top the toilet paper roll sealing the bag tight?
Thanks. Good advice. I'm a bit lax on the preparation, and probably bump them around at harvest time, but I do the digging up as a trench and grubbing around with my hands a fair bit. I put them in bags with air flow to them after a random amount of time "curing" under random conditions (must do better) and keep them in the cupboard under the stairs while the weather's still warm (as it's the coolest place in the house), but I try to remember to empty each bag every now and then and throw out any that show signs of rotting. I transfer them to the loft when it gets cold, where I hang the bags from big nails or screws in the roof beams (more air gets to them, and they're away from anything that might like munching them). That seems to work fairly well and we use them up by about mid-winter. It's all well and good saying don't damage them, but nobody told the slugs (or rats), and often it's any with a little hole in them that start to rot first. A fair amount also get peeled, blanched and frozen in chunks good for roasting, or mashed and frozen in tubs or patties. This is useful when they don't show too many signs of predation on the outside, but have bits of rot or holes when you cut them, because you find and remove any nasty bits in preparing them and once frozen it can't get any worse. Sometimes you get spuds with just a tiny hole on the skin but chewed out inside, and those rapidly ruin a bag of stored spuds if not found in time.
🙏💕 Thank you so much for sharing your garden knowledge with us !! I really appreciate the way you explain everything with examples! You are an inspiration and a Blessing 🦋🌿 🥔 🌸🐝 ( California )
Hi. Thanks for a straight toward video which I easily followed. This is my 1st full year as a allotment holder , so I'm saving potatoes for the first time. I really enjoyed this video. Thanks
I also store my potatoes in a cooler buried in the garden. The coolers have lots of holes drilled in them, and I generally throw a bag of leaves over the top to insulate the lid. I'm on the Front Range in Colorado, zone 5. At Harvest, after curing, I put my chosen seed potatoes in five gallon buckets with lids and completely buried those out there. The buckets had holes drilled in them. Put layers of dead pine needles between the potatoes, at least for my seed. One year I put a thermometer in the main cooler and it got down to 34 degrees in January but everything stored fine. Have been storing them this way for the last four seasons and generally get between 5 1/2 and 6 months of storage. I appreciate all you do sir!! Finally got some 10 gallon grow pots.
Thanks for making your video! Good to know!! And glad I watched it!! Thanks for covering potato storing and as well potatos for seeds.. and for long time storing!!
Hey Lea glad this has helped I have lots of videos on potatoes so check out the playlist section. There might be more in there thats of interest to you
I live in Alaska, and store my potatoes in the basement of my house. I let in enough outside air to keep the temperature colder than 45F. That works well for me until we get a warm spell in April or early May, then it gets hard to maintain the temperature. I just bag the seed potatoes, the others are stored loosely in crates, buckets, and tubs. Rot is almost never a problem, it only happens when someone harvests the old seed.
This is a huge struggle for me. I live in a small house, with a small garden. After watching your videos a couple of years ago. I started growing my tats in containers. Fabulous so thank you. I now have the issue to store. I want to grow more but storage space is limited.
I am just learning potatoes better this year. The last harvest I had was pretty good. I like to learn a crop on a small scale first, and then plant as much as I think I would like to store or can. This year I have a whole plot dedicated to corn, because I learned by my mistakes the last two seasons. Happy to have found your channel, as I was in search of curing and long terms storage for potatoes. I would love a root cellar, but not sure how to get one put in. God Bless.
I’m in Canada and we get old winters. My mother in law taught me to store potatoes in trays of dirt in a dark cold cellar. You can stack them with news paper in between. This was the way of the Ukrainian Canadian farmer from the 1940’s. Potatoes all winter long for pierogies!
everytime I think I have watched all your videos, I find another one. This is my first time growing lots of potatoes, and will have to store them. Usually we plant one planter and eat them in a week or so. I am hoping to have plenty. I will save some for seed potatoes and I'm planning to store them in our garage under a table draped with a cloth that reaches to the floor to keep as much light out as possible. Thnank you for all your info
Great vid :) Grew spuds for the 1st time this year & did surprisingly well -- I have spuds everywhere lol. At least now I can store them & save for seed :) TYVM
Thanks so much! I finally have my own home, and I love potatoes, so I’m growing them. I have some store bought that started sprouting, so I cut them up and I’m growing them in containers. I’m going to be using plastic kiddie pools for big containers.
I store my seed potatoes in milk cartons. I keep the milk carton in my garage. About three weeks before planting, I bring the milk carton into the house to wake up the seed potatoes. I plant my seed potatoes four weeks before the frost free date.
I wrap mine in kitchen towel and layer them in paper bags - that way, when i use them up, i can re-use the paper bags for carrying scraps down to the allotment plot and popping in the compost bin and can also compost the kitchen towel.
Hi ! Thanks for the vid ! On harvesting potatoes, I have found that gently pulling up the plant works well to get a lot out b4 having to dig/fork at all ( gather all the vines coming from same plant in your hands, as possible, and start pulling). As your soil improves - humus, structure etc. - this should be possible, even in heavy clay soils eventually. Practicing no-dig and no-till after the initial till if you want to/think u need to, along with healthy compost applications is the main way to do this, and adding leaves, straw, hay or grass clippings as mulch, for those who's climate and pest types don't make that a negative thing (or, at least still do it over potatoes if not too risky), can really improve the humus levels. Meanwhile, also covering your potatoes with minimal soil/planting them less than 6 in. deep, but mulching heavily to keep them from getting green, makes harvesting them without digging possible. Until/unless the soil is such that I can dig around, checking for strays by hand, I still fork around the area AFTER pulling out all I could followed by the hand search. I even wait until I've gone ahead a few spaces, and avoid forking right up to where I haven't harvested yet, to try to avoid damaging those. Have an extra bucket etc. along to put any damaged ones in, and eat those 1st of course, starting with the worst hit :). Anyway, this is what's working for me, not picking on anyone ! Blessings from Wisconsin, USA !
It would be interesting to discover which method will store potatoes the longest. Maybe yourself and a few other UA-cam gardeners could do a "Potato store challenge" and see who has the best potatoes for the longest.
@@simplifygardening Thanks for the reply. I have seen the "clamp" method used, and keeping them in sacks and potato bags, and in trays, but someone once told me keeping root crops in sand would preserve them the best. I don't know how keeping them in sand would compare to other methods, but it would be really interesting to see which method comes out best. Every year UA-cam gardeners have "challenge" videos, I just thought this type of challenge would be a great idea. :)
@@fortpatches I tried everything, can’t seem to store anywhere for long. I keep them covered in flat boxes, spread out and in coolest place. This year I planted a few with sprouts in September and grew until cold blast came through, got about 3 lbs, small potatoes but better than letting go bad.
@@natalie1329 Straw is better. It doesn't have the seeds like hay does, so you won't have those trying to sprout with your potatoes, etc., and stealing nutrients. Plus, straw is less likely to mold.
My issue in Alaska is keeping them from freezing, which will destroy the entire batch. At the same time the house is too warm, so I have to find a spot in a mud room or garage that's cold without ever actually freezing.
Thank you Tony for the information! One more question about the seed potatoes. How do you get the eyes to sprout? I planted 2 seed potatoes I purchsed from a grower supply store and they both did fabulous. I also just took 8 potatoes from the grocery store and threw them in soil - I got 50% to grow and produce. Not a bad result for my first year! But I'm still confused though how to make a store potato sprout and turn in to a seed potato. Thanks!
We have a video on that too, but place on an egg tray and place in a cool bright place and they will sprout. here is the link ua-cam.com/video/iyYFNwEoKxA/v-deo.html
Hi Tony. If saving potatoes for seeds for next year, do you still need to dry them and cure them for a few days or do you just go straight into wrapping them in paper for storage over winter?
@@katinss9983 Since asking the question, I read somewhere that it's best to cure seed potatoes too so do that for a couple of days before wrapping them in paper.
Thank you for this video. You have the talent to teach with simple words and evidence. I have a question: when you store some potatoes from your harvest with the intention to have seeds available for the next season, do you do any specific task when the planting time approaches in order to induce sprouting?
Yes, absolutely bring them out of storage into a cool but bright room, place in the window in egg trays and leave them there for a few weeks they will sprout and are then ready to plant
@@simplifygardening I’m American and I can spot that Welsh voice a mile away! It’s a beautiful language that creates a beautiful sound when speaking Engliah
nice video and first time I saw one from you. I think the most important aspect of storage is to use a good storage variety to begin with. Not every potato is a good storage potato. Clean cool and dark is the key to good storage. Gases from potato and other vegi's are also a huge factor in storage time.Keep them seperate from other vegi's.
Yes Wayne you have it nailed and great tips, thanks. I have many videos around this topic that might interest you. Feel free to check them out. Welcome to the channel
I just leave them in the ground and then harvest them when I need them. I live a fairly mild climate in Washington State USA (zone 8). No deep freezes. I sometimes cover them with cardboard to keep them more dry. Cheers!
There's an old Chinese way of laying hard heads of cabbage in a pyramid or cone shape, layed with dry straw, then covering with dirt, but packing the dirt with a layer of mud that somewhat hardens to keep more mositure out. Soil might be safest way if the SHTF and people break into houses looking for food.
Great description ty. This is my first year for storing potatoes. I've been watching many different videos on this. In my opinion this is the best example of what to do. Again ty.
@@safi456 The garage will be fine. Just check them monthly to ensure no bad potatoes are forming or rotting, this will prevent them spreading the rot to others in the batch
My dad told me his grandparents would store the potatoes similar to your method but instead of hay they would use sand in the container and put them in the root cellar.
Yes old fashioned clamps were used. Sorry for the late reply. had some issues with comments not showing that they had not been answered, so I am getting through them
Thank you for this video. I have not been successful in the past storing my potatoes and now I know why. I'm heading outside right now to harvest and thought I'd check out UA-cam. Glad I did.
Not keen on this 'Premiers' feature. I keep clicking on videos that aren't videos, telling me when a video is coming. I can see when the video arrives because it appears in my subscriptions.
The premiere will start at exactly the same time I would normally post. However, This allows me to converse in a chat with my subscribers allowing for questions to be answered right away.
After you do all the steps with the straw and stuff, where do you then keep the boxes or trays? Is there a certain temperature at which they need to be stored? I do not have a cellar and in SoCal we don’t really get very cold in the winter. I do mine in pots and am thinking about leaving them in the ground during the winter and harvesting them as needed. Also, what size or capacity are your pots and how many seed potatoes do you put in each one?
The last few years I have stored my potatoes in insulated coolers since the unheated room is quite cold at times in the winter and the heated part of the house is to warm. Because I did a better job drying them first last year there was not real amounts of moisture build up. The potatoes stayed firm all the way through and I ate my last one this past July. The sprouting never started until April which I clean up once in May. I also plan to do this again...I also layered with paper or cardboard. Also stored my seed potatoes the same way.Although I never had alot I also put my carrots in those coolers.
Hi, thanks for all the info in this video. I do have some questions though. Why put the seed potatoes in paper, compared to the eating potatoes? Can the eating ones be stored in paper as well? Is there any difference between the two? Thanks again.
They can all be stored this way Kathryn. The paper blocks the light regulates the temps, and also absorbs any humidity which prevents the potato from sprouting
A few year's bac here in central Florida a trk drivr was over on his axle limit & gave away about 500+ pounds of taters, i dug out a hole undr my porch & carefully buried at least 200# of em, we had taters 4 a long time, one's that started 2 sprout we planted 4 a new crop, i wouldn't wanna live on taters but it just mite B possible 2 do..
Hi , I have always put our potatoes into the paper sacks and stored them in one room that we don't heat so it just gets what flows in there. We may get an odd one or two that we have to remove but that is all. I do like your ideas though so we May try them this year especially if there are going to be problems with next years seed crops. Thanks for yet another great video.
Judith if you have an unheated room and it works for you thats great. Always good to hold your own seed back. this year shows that with whats happening
Thanks for the tips. I have been doing it all wrong for a long time. I usually let the skins set right, but then I pile them in a large box, biggest to the bottom and smalls on top. Then I lay an old bedsheet loosely on top and close the box loosely. Then I’d place them in a cooler spot in the garage. There is some softening but it works okay. We don’t have a root cellar anymore so we make do.
Thank you for all the tips and info, I'm growing my own potatoes for the first time this year. I have them in 2 grow bags, one a cloth one I bought and 1 is a plastic bag where the soil came in. The leaves are slowly yellowing now and I honestly had no idea how to exactly treat and store them next. Now I just have to wait till harvest to see how much yield I actually have.☺
Thank you for watching my content. If you enjoyed this video you can view more like it here ---> ua-cam.com/video/6FzHYrQKlnw/v-deo.html Don't forget to like and share my content. Thanks, guys :)
could i use dry grass clippings instead of hay? just curious
@@TheMississauga333 Yes you can but make sure its fully dry first
Can you use straw instead of hay for layering in a box?
@@elizabethstump4077 u sure can
Thank you so much. Can this method be used for storing carrots and onions
I generally store my potatoes on my hips and belly, but I'll give this method a go when I dig up my next crop!
Ha Ha Ive been doing the same lately lol
🤦🏼♀️
😂
Just a moment of chips on the lips adds to the hips 😉.
😂😂😂
My Grandpa used to grow lots of potatoes every year. He would harvest them in August/September. He had an old used chest freezer that he buried in the ground up to the lid and he would put a layer of straw on the floor of the freezer. He would place the potato harvest on the straw and close the lid which was cracked open slightly with a stick for ventilation, and then cover it up with some straw and canvas. The potatoes would keep just fine this way well into the following summer. Oh, and by the way, he lived to the ripe old age of 99! :)
Yes like an old fashion clamp. Would act like a cold store
What a beautiful history, Gig777. Many thanks for the tip. God bless you so much.
Any rodent problems doing that?
@@samuelm370 Not if you have a good cat. You could always add a layer of screen to keep them out.
I wonder if they were just stored in a freezer chest (with the lid propped open a bit for ventilation) in an unheated garage, if it would do the same, maybe just cover the chest with a blanket to avoid freezing?
My grandfather used to make his "potato lasagna" with clean sand instead of straw. This way there is no decomposition risk from the straw and if one did start to rot the sand would "clot" up any moisture preventing it from spreading. The other benefit is you can reuse the sand over and over
Hey thanks for that tip.
Our family did the same. We did that with all our root vegetables. We lived in Northern Ontarion and had 3 big sand bins to store our harvest.
@@PAPIKen0728 How big was each bin, approximately? Are they still available in the US, and did you keep the bins in a cool basement or the garage?
Best vids out there. Minimal chit chat about irrelevant stuff, clear, concise, visual, enunciated well, broadly applicable. You certainly know your audience. Bravo.
Thanks Sam. Its taken me a while to learn to cut out the crap. I am glad you notice the effort that goes into them. Cheers for your comment, you made my day
Right! I just watched a video where she recorded her dog for 4 minutes and then her CLEANING THE ENTIRE GREENHOUSE of all the trash she left laying around before she even started on the topic.
Some american gardeners channels have elevated crab chitchat to an art
Yes, right to the point without trying to become a movie star! Thank You Simply Gardening.
@@jswhosoever4533 lying* around 😊👍
The gophers taught me the best way I’ve ever seen to store potatoes. I left some potatoes in a small pile on the dirt floor of my root cellar. Gophers discovered the empty space that the root cellar creates in the ground and used it as a dumping site for the dirt they removed to make their tunnels. Their dump site just happened to be right above the pile of potatoes and so my potatoes ended up being covered with about 8” of dirt. We were gone for a long period of time so when I discovered what had happened, the potatoes had been in my very dark cellar for a year. When I removed the dirt off of the potatoes I was shocked to find that the potatoes were just as firm and moist as the day I dug them with zero sprouting! I live in zone 5.
Yeah soil is a great way to store but it has to be just slightly dry
@@simplifygardening Thank you for saying this. Couldn't I just drag the containers into a garage and dig up the potatoes whenever I need them for dinner? Would they store in the dirt if not disturbed?
@@sn232 I’d say they would rot if the vines are left attached. I’d dig them remove all vines and put back into the dirt.
Been using 5 gallon buckets with holes drilled all around for air movement and kept in a dark room at approximately 3 to 5 degrees Celsius and have had my potatoes last into april. Saves real estate.
I'm older but I remember my mother having a potato bin in the basement. It was a 36in. x 24in. and was made out of trellis wood. with about an inch between each slat. Even on the bottom. There was no top. It sat on 2 bricks to add to air circulation for the bottom potatoes. I really like your instruction and plain to follow it. Thank you for taking the time to explain each process. Oh...The bin was about 30in. high.
Kf thats a great idea, like a cold room store box. I may give this a try. thanks
I may try that also. Did she put straw or anything in it?
We did the same just one big potato bin stored / eat them till planting season and planted the remaining..
Tony, Smart people know. Brilliant people teach. Kind people share. All are potential life changing attributes to many of us, but I suspect to you it's just another day. Thanks for sharing your knowledge and kindness.
Thanks for such a nice comment Larry. That means the world to me. The comments is where I get my thanks for the videos. I love to interact with you folks. its a perfect trade :)
@@simplifygardening thank you so much.i know it's a podcast from 2 years but so grateful for your kind knowledge. Just grown ours for the first time and was looking at how to store them..they are telling us we will have food shortages as bad as ww2.msm that is.
@@maryneavyn8734 We are going to see shortages like most of us have never seen before. growing your own will become more important as money becomes very tight
@@simplifygardening Yes food and fuel and energy. Had a lovely walk in our local bog with our doggie and great to see turf being cut and saved.
Here it is 2021, and I'm an experienced gardener. But, when people like you make awesome, educational videos like these, I realize that the learning process never ends. Thank you so much for your very useful tips!! Liked, subscribed and hit the bell :-)
Wow, thanks!
You will save people a lot of money and heart ache if they follow this advice, nice one Tony thank you.
Cheers mate. I only try to help. I love UA-cam as its perfect for sharing ideas and knowledge that is hard to articulate in writing it down, They say a picture paints a 1000 words, WOnder what video does?
I learned that if you leave the potatoes in the ground for two additional weeks after the plant dies back, the potatoes skin is thicker and will preserve better. Time for an experiment. :)
@@trytobetheballpeople ..thanks, going to do that.
I can't thank you enough for sharing this gold mine of information. I have been terrified about the future, as I'm sure everyone else has too, at some point. You, and people like you here on You Tube are helping me feel a little more in control and less afraid. Day by day. I hope this message finds you and yours, including your viewers, safe, healthy and well. Cheers and gratitude from Texas!
Hi Kristin, We are all good here. Yes food security is on everyones minds atm. Did you see my latest video on potatoes? I think it will be of interest ua-cam.com/video/hgJa2wrX6lA/v-deo.html
My feelings exactly. All these youtube gardeners teaching us newbies could be saving lives!
Don’t be terrified... The Lord will provide 💜
@@mweber5459 Yet strangely enough the Lord seems predisposed to primarily help those help themselves.
@@mweber5459 i guess the lord is stingy when it comes to little kids starving to death in Africa
Folks if you have any questions I am more than happy to help. Please help this video get noticed by clicking the thumbs up and also sharing is caring :) Are you storing potatoes this year? how are you doing it? If your new here don't forget to subscribe. Look forward to chatting with you all during the premier :)
Recommended by UA-cam in time to store potatoes to get my daughter and myself through the Coronavirus lockdown. 😂 Finally! UA-cam gave a good recommendation!
Well I am glad that UA-cam decided to show you my content. Welcome to the channel :). For ref. I have a detailed video coming on Friday about potatoes
How did your potatoes hold up?
I learned from an old priest here in Ireland that the newest thinking on seed potato storage is to simply place them in a container open to the light all during the winter thereby allowing the potato to develop a greenish skin which not only acts like a pesticide but inhibits the activity of mould or bacteria which would otherwise rot the potato during the winter. I tried it this year and went ahead and placed a selection of potatoes from last year in a plastic container like your blue tray in the video and left it out on the table in my shed all winter. When I wanted to plant up this year they were ready chitted at the right time. I was so impressed that's why I'm sharing it with you. Incidentially, the old priest was someone who taught horticulture within the order called the salesians
how did they do
I want to thank you for this video on storing potatoes. I just stores my potatoes by putting them in a cardboard box with newspaper between layers. You have showed me a better way in this video that I plan to follow this year. Thank you again.
Hi Sally. I am glad that you got some value from the video. Always nice when it helps people to get new ideas.
I was planning on par boiling a lot of mine and freezing them but now I’ll try your ideas! Thanks!
I’m in the US and just emptied 2 pots and have 16 pounds of the things!!
Just recently learned about the Ruth Stout method, and saw it working very well for potatoes. Haven't tried it for my self, but it looks very promising. No digging, no weeding, very little watering, and very little chance of damaging the potato skin. HIGHLY recommend looking into it to see if it's right for you.
I did the Ruth Stout method and its works very well and its too easy to do. Go ahead!
I love it! It works well!
I second and third the Ruth Stout method for potatoes. So easy!
I grew beautiful potatoes this year, and it was a lot of potatoes using her method ! ! So easy to do... It's a must try ! ! !
I love the way he explains things, clearly, in detail, gives reasons why. I watched other potato tutorials & this is the best one by far, I truly learned what to do now with what I have & am going to put his teachings into practice this coming Spring. So many important points were made which other tutorials left out! And he gives 3 ways to store instead of just one. This is valuable, about how not to throw, bruise, damage the skin of our precious roots. About moisture, growing in pots if you wish, shows how to do it. I love this!
Hey Kellie. Thanks so much for noticing the effort that goes into my videos. I am glad you found value in it :)
You're still the best Tony!
My wife and I have been preparing our RoofTop Garden Sanctuary again this year, and we ended up making 4 separate containers full of various potato SEED. Well they're all doing very well, as the plants are popped out and growing large and rapidly.
So she asked me to check out PROPER ways to preserve our potato harvest when they're finally ready.
Thanks for the tips Tony!
"Hay/Potato Lasagna!" GREAT description!👍
That is awesome!
I learned a lot from this! I live in Qld Australia summertime I have to refrigerate our potato supply that I buy in a bulk 5 kg bag, sufficient stock for household of only 2 of us. Cooler seasons they can survive unrefrigerated. Anyone who wants to know how to prolong your potatoes in the fridge vege compartment. If you place a few fresh Granny Smith apples bin with your potatoes they last forever without spoiling and spreading. Can’t use any other apples, must be Granny Smith. Can be applied to home grown potatoes too but thought I’d put it out there for large families that buy in bulk who experience in hot climate seasons and their potatoes spoiling in fridge. You won’t lose a single potato stored in your fridge vege crisper to spoiling. Just don’t store in the bags you purchased them in. Remember only Granny Smith apples.love you videos Tony, especially your containing growing tutorial with the wooden grow support K& irrigation, so many handy suggestions in comments from others offering their suggestions to store when I eventually grow my own. It’s wonderful that we all contribute ideas to solve issues & concerns. Thanks everyone!
Oh wow, a whole new set of challenges right there
In this time of crisis, these tips can save lives. Thank you for sharing friend 🙏🏼 god bless you.
I just learned more about spuds than I ever knew! I love these great tips!!!
Hey Bigfoot. Thanks mate, Really appreciate the great comment :)
This is the best instructional video I have seen on this process - how to handle them & be gentle so the skins ego to get damaged. Also love the instructions on how to store seed potatoes for next season, thank you!
Glad it was helpful! Fran.
Thank you so much! I’ve only just begun to learn about food preservation. It’s such comfort to find so many loving people openly sharing what they know in such informative yet concise ways. I’m truly grateful, thank you.
Hey Jane. Glad its of value to you :)
So far I have never grown enough two have the storing problem ,but today after watching your videos I’ve got six containers planted and ready to grow.
Literally everything i know about growing potato's i learned from watching your videos. Keep up the content man smashing it!
Thanks Tee
Excellent information. I remember all the backyard gardens in Liverpool when I was married to an English girl and visiting her Mum. Now I understand why the British are such earnest gardeners. Subbed!
I am trying to store my seed potatoes for the first time this year. I appreciate the storage wrapping advice. Living in South Florida I have to store them over summer rather than winter as planting season for potatoes is Oct-Apr. I have a large commercial refrigerator that doesn't dehumidify like regular ones. I'm hopeful your techniques will help get them through.
Greetings from New Zealand. I discovered your channel a few days ago, and wow! Sooooo much I didn't know about potatoes. Now I know why I always had lots of leaves and few tubers (wrong kind of fertilizer), and never had success with mounding (turns out all the varieties I grow are determinates - didn't even know that was a thing). My success has been so minimal, I didn't even bother with them last year. I had pretty much given up on growing spuds. Thanks to your fabulous videos, I will grow them again this year! And not waste my very limited garden space doing it either (6 beds of 900mm x 900mm) - I'm going to do them in containers. Thank you so much for all the time and effort you put into doing these wonderful videos 😊
Dana, firstly, welcome to the channel. Secondly I hope you do try again because I grew them this way when I lived in Australia so you can definitely do it too
maybe they need less nitrogen and/or more potassium? or a lighter soil? I just watched a Russian planting video showing that hard-wood ash, which is high in potassium, is sprinkled aound the potatoes before pushing dirt over them.
Thank you, Tony! Your video was very helpful to me. I have two relatively small raised garden beds and I try to grow as much as I can in the space I have. But digging the potatoes up without disturbing the other plants just complicated the harvesting process. I will definitely grow my potatoes in containers starting with my next crop!
Glad it was helpful!
Thank you Tony for the video. I store my seed potatoes in paper bags in a dark place inside the house. Never had a problem. Thanks again.
As long as it works thats the main things and like anything in gardening there are always lots of ways to achieve the same goal :)
Thank you for your very helpful video. I've had success growing spuds this year (2019). I grew them in bags and have been harvesting a bag each week for consumption. It is now the end of August and I need to think about how to store the spuds, which I have learnt now. Thank you also for the tip on how to keep spuds for sowing in the new season. I have grown Maris Piper, Jerseys, Charlottes, which are the best so far. The Red Duke of Yorks are also fine. I have yet to harvest the King Edwards. I have just sowed a batch of Nicola and will soon sow more Charlottes which I had bought for Christmas crop. But it sounds like one does not harvest spuds for Christmas because if there is frost, the crop will not materialise. So it looks like I'll have to get a move on and get these spuds in and harvest them before the frost sets in. Thank you once again.
Thank you Tony, I like this Premier format.....gets us chatting, and you can see what's on folk's mind and pick up tips.🎇
Yes you can hammer ideas around at the point of a video and it lets me converse with you guys in real time. I really enjoyed it tonight, Makes me feel part of it too
🎇
Thanks for this video. I live in the Annapolis Valley of Nova Scotia. I store my potatoes and beets in damp peat moss. Take a 5 G pail and put a plastic garbage bag inside. Load some damp, not dry or wet peat moss in, then stagger a layer of spuds. Add more peat. Layer all the way to the top. Then place a 3" tube [a few empty cardboard toilet rolls work] in the top and twist tie the plastic bag around the tube. The peat regulates the moisture in the spuds through the tube, allowing more damp air in and overly damp air out. I've been able to have potatoes edible for between 8- 9 months. The beets I've been able to store with this method for up to 13 months! Carrots don't like this.
When you are talking about the the part, do you mean that tube is uncovered like a hole or you tie the bag over top the toilet paper roll sealing the bag tight?
@@brandio1044 what I got was that he uses the tube as an air vent...
Thanks!
Thanks. Good advice. I'm a bit lax on the preparation, and probably bump them around at harvest time, but I do the digging up as a trench and grubbing around with my hands a fair bit. I put them in bags with air flow to them after a random amount of time "curing" under random conditions (must do better) and keep them in the cupboard under the stairs while the weather's still warm (as it's the coolest place in the house), but I try to remember to empty each bag every now and then and throw out any that show signs of rotting. I transfer them to the loft when it gets cold, where I hang the bags from big nails or screws in the roof beams (more air gets to them, and they're away from anything that might like munching them). That seems to work fairly well and we use them up by about mid-winter. It's all well and good saying don't damage them, but nobody told the slugs (or rats), and often it's any with a little hole in them that start to rot first. A fair amount also get peeled, blanched and frozen in chunks good for roasting, or mashed and frozen in tubs or patties. This is useful when they don't show too many signs of predation on the outside, but have bits of rot or holes when you cut them, because you find and remove any nasty bits in preparing them and once frozen it can't get any worse. Sometimes you get spuds with just a tiny hole on the skin but chewed out inside, and those rapidly ruin a bag of stored spuds if not found in time.
Yes air is the key to keeping them fresh
🙏💕 Thank you so much for sharing your garden knowledge with us !! I really appreciate the way you explain everything with examples! You are an inspiration and a Blessing 🦋🌿 🥔 🌸🐝 ( California )
Glad it was helpful! Thanks for tuning in :)
Loads of great tips in this video Tony, thank you for sharing the info :-)
Thanks Liz appreciate the support :)
I have never had a fantastic crop, so that's why I am watching your videos learn all I can.
This year will be your year Michelle
Hi. Thanks for a straight toward video which I easily followed. This is my 1st full year as a allotment holder , so I'm saving potatoes for the first time. I really enjoyed this video. Thanks
Glad it was of help for you
I also store my potatoes in a cooler buried in the garden. The coolers have lots of holes drilled in them, and I generally throw a bag of leaves over the top to insulate the lid. I'm on the Front Range in Colorado, zone 5. At Harvest, after curing, I put my chosen seed potatoes in five gallon buckets with lids and completely buried those out there. The buckets had holes drilled in them. Put layers of dead pine needles between the potatoes, at least for my seed. One year I put a thermometer in the main cooler and it got down to 34 degrees in January but everything stored fine. Have been storing them this way for the last four seasons and generally get between 5 1/2 and 6 months of storage. I appreciate all you do sir!! Finally got some 10 gallon grow pots.
Thats a great idea David you must have a low water table? here it would flood them
Thanks for making your video!
Good to know!! And glad I watched it!!
Thanks for covering potato storing and as well potatos for seeds.. and for long time storing!!
Hey Lea glad this has helped I have lots of videos on potatoes so check out the playlist section. There might be more in there thats of interest to you
Great a advice for someone like me - new to growing potatoes. I now need to clear space in the shed and cover the window🥔⭐️
Glad to help
I live in Alaska, and store my potatoes in the basement of my house. I let in enough outside air to keep the temperature colder than 45F. That works well for me until we get a warm spell in April or early May, then it gets hard to maintain the temperature. I just bag the seed potatoes, the others are stored loosely in crates, buckets, and tubs. Rot is almost never a problem, it only happens when someone harvests the old seed.
Yeah a perfect way to do it when you have a colder environment
I salvage wood from pallets and used the lumberto build crates to store my potatos in....thank you for this awesome video
This is a huge struggle for me. I live in a small house, with a small garden. After watching your videos a couple of years ago. I started growing my tats in containers. Fabulous so thank you. I now have the issue to store. I want to grow more but storage space is limited.
Laura, under the house or a garden shed if possible under the stairs lots of places you could use
@@simplifygardening thanks I’m going to try under the stairs as that is cool. What a great idea. Thank you.
Your voice is very calming love.
Hi, Thanks :)
Thank You for making the world a better place brother ...From sunny Los Angeles in the future 2020.
Hey mate.welcome to the channel. Great to have you here
I am just learning potatoes better this year. The last harvest I had was pretty good. I like to learn a crop on a small scale first, and then plant as much as I think I would like to store or can. This year I have a whole plot dedicated to corn, because I learned by my mistakes the last two seasons. Happy to have found your channel, as I was in search of curing and long terms storage for potatoes. I would love a root cellar, but not sure how to get one put in. God Bless.
Sounds great!
I’m in Canada and we get old winters. My mother in law taught me to store potatoes in trays of dirt in a dark cold cellar. You can stack them with news paper in between. This was the way of the Ukrainian Canadian farmer from the 1940’s. Potatoes all winter long for pierogies!
Yes a great way to store
Concise and to the point. You didn't waste my time. Excellent! Thanks, Tony. Subscribed.
I store my spuds mainly by turning them into something else, like an Irish Potato Layer Cake, or roasting then freezing.
Yeah another good way to save them, The problem with this is that your limited to the dishes you can use them for then
Freezer bags work ok instead of dishes...
everytime I think I have watched all your videos, I find another one. This is my first time growing lots of potatoes, and will have to store them. Usually we plant one planter and eat them in a week or so. I am hoping to have plenty. I will save some for seed potatoes and I'm planning to store them in our garage under a table draped with a cloth that reaches to the floor to keep as much light out as possible. Thnank you for all your info
Great vid :) Grew spuds for the 1st time this year & did surprisingly well -- I have spuds everywhere lol. At least now I can store them & save for seed :) TYVM
Thanks so much! I finally have my own home, and I love potatoes, so I’m growing them. I have some store bought that started sprouting, so I cut them up and I’m growing them in containers. I’m going to be using plastic kiddie pools for big containers.
You are so welcome!
I store my seed potatoes in milk cartons. I keep the milk carton in my garage. About three weeks before planting, I bring the milk carton into the house to wake up the seed potatoes. I plant my seed potatoes four weeks before the frost free date.
Great tips
Just found your channel. Have a great potato harvest this year and didn't know a few of these tips. I'll be saving potatoes for seed. Thank you.
I wrap mine in kitchen towel and layer them in paper bags - that way, when i use them up, i can re-use the paper bags for carrying scraps down to the allotment plot and popping in the compost bin and can also compost the kitchen towel.
Great idea and saving the planet too :)
You composted the towel ? Had no idea that would work .
kitchen towel?? is that a paper towel? or cloth?
I disagree about putting potatoes or peelings on a compost heap any blight spores will remain in your compost,unless it reaches a very high temp.
Hi ! Thanks for the vid ! On harvesting potatoes, I have found that gently pulling up the plant works well to get a lot out b4 having to dig/fork at all ( gather all the vines coming from same plant in your hands, as possible, and start pulling). As your soil improves - humus, structure etc. - this should be possible, even in heavy clay soils eventually. Practicing no-dig and no-till after the initial till if you want to/think u need to, along with healthy compost applications is the main way to do this, and adding leaves, straw, hay or grass clippings as mulch, for those who's climate and pest types don't make that a negative thing (or, at least still do it over potatoes if not too risky), can really improve the humus levels. Meanwhile, also covering your potatoes with minimal soil/planting them less than 6 in. deep, but mulching heavily to keep them from getting green, makes harvesting them without digging possible. Until/unless the soil is such that I can dig around, checking for strays by hand, I still fork around the area AFTER pulling out all I could followed by the hand search. I even wait until I've gone ahead a few spaces, and avoid forking right up to where I haven't harvested yet, to try to avoid damaging those. Have an extra bucket etc. along to put any damaged ones in, and eat those 1st of course, starting with the worst hit :). Anyway, this is what's working for me, not picking on anyone ! Blessings from Wisconsin, USA !
Yes all fantastic points and advice thanks
It would be interesting to discover which method will store potatoes the longest. Maybe yourself and a few other UA-cam gardeners could do a "Potato store challenge" and see who has the best potatoes for the longest.
What a great idea. Might leave a box and see
@@simplifygardening Thanks for the reply. I have seen the "clamp" method used, and keeping them in sacks and potato bags, and in trays, but someone once told me keeping root crops in sand would preserve them the best. I don't know how keeping them in sand would compare to other methods, but it would be really interesting to see which method comes out best. Every year UA-cam gardeners have "challenge" videos, I just thought this type of challenge would be a great idea. :)
I’m going to try both as I am growing some potatoes in NW Florida right now
@@judyhowell7075 results?
@@fortpatches I tried everything, can’t seem to store anywhere for long. I keep them covered in flat boxes, spread out and in coolest place. This year I planted a few with sprouts in September and grew until cold blast came through, got about 3 lbs, small potatoes but better than letting go bad.
Great info Tony I’m really excited to see my first potato harvest. I was only just thinking of how to store them. Cheers bach for the tips 👍 Herms
4:51 "We are creating a Hay and Potato lasagna"
how did that go? Sorry for the late reply. had some issues with comments not showing that they had not been answered, so I am getting through them
Can you use straw or does it have to be hay?
@@natalie1329 Straw is better. It doesn't have the seeds like hay does, so you won't have those trying to sprout with your potatoes, etc., and stealing nutrients. Plus, straw is less likely to mold.
@@chachadodds5860 thanks so much getting things ready 😃
This is the first year we are going to grow potatoes and the bucket method you did is a great tip for us and how to store them. Thank you
Next tuesday episode about potatoes so keep an eye out for it
My issue in Alaska is keeping them from freezing, which will destroy the entire batch. At the same time the house is too warm, so I have to find a spot in a mud room or garage that's cold without ever actually freezing.
DID YOU EVER FIND A SOLUTION?
Same here in Michigan
Best video ever..fried potatoes n onions it is tonight.u made my mouth water when u said that potatoes..
Thanks glad you enjoyed it
Thank you Tony for the information! One more question about the seed potatoes. How do you get the eyes to sprout? I planted 2 seed potatoes I purchsed from a grower supply store and they both did fabulous. I also just took 8 potatoes from the grocery store and threw them in soil - I got 50% to grow and produce. Not a bad result for my first year! But I'm still confused though how to make a store potato sprout and turn in to a seed potato. Thanks!
We have a video on that too, but place on an egg tray and place in a cool bright place and they will sprout. here is the link ua-cam.com/video/iyYFNwEoKxA/v-deo.html
We just expose them to the light and slightly warmer temps.
Greetings from the 44th Parallel, North Michigan USA. Thanks for the education, looking forward to storing my potato's this winter.
Hey your welcome. Thanks for your comment let me know how it goes
Hi Tony. If saving potatoes for seeds for next year, do you still need to dry them and cure them for a few days or do you just go straight into wrapping them in paper for storage over winter?
I'd love to know this too
@@katinss9983 Since asking the question, I read somewhere that it's best to cure seed potatoes too so do that for a couple of days before wrapping them in paper.
@@davegaskell7680 great thank you, its hard to find that info.
Hi from Tasmania! Answered my questions about how to store seed potatoes from my harvest for next spring. Thank you!
Hey Kat. This channel is all about answering those gardening questions people have. Thanks for taking the time to comment
Thank you for this video. You have the talent to teach with simple words and evidence. I have a question: when you store some potatoes from your harvest with the intention to have seeds available for the next season, do you do any specific task when the planting time approaches in order to induce sprouting?
Yes, absolutely bring them out of storage into a cool but bright room, place in the window in egg trays and leave them there for a few weeks they will sprout and are then ready to plant
This is the best video I've seen on storing potatoes.thank you !
Would newspaper (or something else) work as well for storing the potatoes in the boxes? I live in the city so do not have any hey.
lexington476 you can get hay at a pet store sometimes
Sir, You are a blessing. Thank you for all you do and share!! 🤗
When an Irish guy talks about potatoes it gets near emotional
lol i might have an Irish name but im Welsh :)
I was going to say, that there's a Welsh boy see?
@@simplifygardening I’m American and I can spot that Welsh voice a mile away! It’s a beautiful language that creates a beautiful sound when speaking Engliah
Irish here, this guy's Welsh.
nice video and first time I saw one from you. I think the most important aspect of storage is to use a good storage variety to begin with. Not every potato is a good storage potato. Clean cool and dark is the key to good storage. Gases from potato and other vegi's are also a huge factor in storage time.Keep them seperate from other vegi's.
Yes Wayne you have it nailed and great tips, thanks. I have many videos around this topic that might interest you. Feel free to check them out. Welcome to the channel
I just leave them in the ground and then harvest them when I need them. I live a fairly mild climate in Washington State USA (zone 8). No deep freezes. I sometimes cover them with cardboard to keep them more dry. Cheers!
Thats great if you can do that. Slugs would destroy them here
There's an old Chinese way of laying hard heads of cabbage in a pyramid or cone shape, layed with dry straw, then covering with dirt, but packing the dirt with a layer of mud that somewhat hardens to keep more mositure out. Soil might be safest way if the SHTF and people break into houses looking for food.
Great description ty. This is my first year for storing potatoes. I've been watching many different videos on this. In my opinion this is the best example of what to do. Again ty.
Glad it was helpful!
Can you tell me that where we can store ? In the house ? How about temperatures and lights ?
Still needs to be dark. in a crawl space, or basement. even under a spare bedroom bed and turn off the heating in there
Simplify Gardening So cold is the key?
@@simplifygardening after making the potato lasagne can we leave them in the garage or will they be eaten by creepy crawlies?
@@safi456 The garage will be fine. Just check them monthly to ensure no bad potatoes are forming or rotting, this will prevent them spreading the rot to others in the batch
Just learning, but your detailed storage method makes a lot of sense and I think that's the route I will take. Thanks much, cheers.
Glad it was helpful!
Will straw work as well as the hay in the "potato lasagna" ?
It certainly will
@@simplifygardening can I store potatoes in my green house covered in paper and straw? Won’t they freeze ? we have very cold winters .
I stored my spuds in the cardboard box with hay method last Autumn and all have kept well
My dad told me his grandparents would store the potatoes similar to your method but instead of hay they would use sand in the container and put them in the root cellar.
Yes old fashioned clamps were used. Sorry for the late reply. had some issues with comments not showing that they had not been answered, so I am getting through them
Thank you for this video. I have not been successful in the past storing my potatoes and now I know why. I'm heading outside right now to harvest and thought I'd check out UA-cam. Glad I did.
Great glad u found your answers
Not keen on this 'Premiers' feature. I keep clicking on videos that aren't videos, telling me when a video is coming. I can see when the video arrives because it appears in my subscriptions.
Miles Bancroft 👍 I agree.
The nice thing about premieres is that you can chat with the video creator in real time as you are watching the video!
The premiere will start at exactly the same time I would normally post. However, This allows me to converse in a chat with my subscribers allowing for questions to be answered right away.
Miles its new and will take time for those on it tonight really enjoyed it though
Give it time I think you will get to enjoy t if you give it a chance
Now I will save some blue, red and French fingerling for next year . Thanks for the great harvest and storage tips .
After you do all the steps with the straw and stuff, where do you then keep the boxes or trays? Is there a certain temperature at which they need to be stored? I do not have a cellar and in SoCal we don’t really get very cold in the winter. I do mine in pots and am thinking about leaving them in the ground during the winter and harvesting them as needed. Also, what size or capacity are your pots and how many seed potatoes do you put in each one?
Sorry Cathie just noticed i left that section out during the edit. Keep in a garage or shed between 2 and 10 centigrade make sure its frost free
@@simplifygardening WE DO FARENHEIGHT IN THE U.S
@@alanthomas6438 Google it, that's 35-50 degrees.
Great film. Thanks, no waffle and brilliantly narrated.
Neighbor stored hers in a barrel of sand
Yes like an old fashioned clamp penny a good way to do it
The last few years I have stored my potatoes in insulated coolers since the unheated room is quite cold at times in the winter and the heated part of the house is to warm. Because I did a better job drying them first last year there was not real amounts of moisture build up. The potatoes stayed firm all the way through and I ate my last one this past July. The sprouting never started until April which I clean up once in May. I also plan to do this again...I also layered with paper or cardboard. Also stored my seed potatoes the same way.Although I never had alot I also put my carrots in those coolers.
Hi, thanks for all the info in this video. I do have some questions though. Why put the seed potatoes in paper, compared to the eating potatoes? Can the eating ones be stored in paper as well? Is there any difference between the two? Thanks again.
They can all be stored this way Kathryn. The paper blocks the light regulates the temps, and also absorbs any humidity which prevents the potato from sprouting
As a Landscape gardener myself,, I grow fruit+veg for me+my family,,, also for customers who can't,,, really liked this video,,
Cheers Mark. What a great job you have. I cant wait to be educating about gardening full time. but thats a way off yet
A few year's bac here in central Florida a trk drivr was over on his axle limit & gave away about 500+ pounds of taters, i dug out a hole undr my porch & carefully buried at least 200# of em, we had taters 4 a long time, one's that started 2 sprout we planted 4 a new crop, i wouldn't wanna live on taters but it just mite B possible 2 do..
IN effect you made an old fashion clamp. great stuff
Hi , I have always put our potatoes into the paper sacks and stored them in one room that we don't heat so it just gets what flows in there. We may get an odd one or two that we have to remove but that is all. I do like your ideas though so we May try them this year especially if there are going to be problems with next years seed crops. Thanks for yet another great video.
Judith if you have an unheated room and it works for you thats great. Always good to hold your own seed back. this year shows that with whats happening
I store mine in my stomach that is why I clicked on this video :(
Not a bad place to store them Phill
Thank you so much for the tips on harvesting and storage! I just planted my first two potato beds last week and have two more to put in.
Awesome Terry you will need this video by the sounds of it 😉👍
The first video I've found on this subject that actually shows how to do this, thanks!
Thanks for the tips. I have been doing it all wrong for a long time. I usually let the skins set right, but then I pile them in a large box, biggest to the bottom and smalls on top. Then I lay an old bedsheet loosely on top and close the box loosely. Then I’d place them in a cooler spot in the garage. There is some softening but it works okay. We don’t have a root cellar anymore so we make do.
As long as the potatoes last you then it makes no difference but try some of these methods
Thank you for all the tips and info, I'm growing my own potatoes for the first time this year.
I have them in 2 grow bags, one a cloth one I bought and 1 is a plastic bag where the soil came in.
The leaves are slowly yellowing now and I honestly had no idea how to exactly treat and store them next. Now I just have to wait till harvest to see how much yield I actually have.☺
Wonderful! so happy for you, well done. check out todays video on potatoes I think you will enjoy it. ua-cam.com/video/L1rf1FXtI9s/v-deo.html
Hope you do more of these live videos. Thanks for all the information.
Glad you enjoyed it Shirley. I will be doing them over the weeks and see how they are received