- Thread starter
- #11
digitS'
Garden Master
I may have to move. Honestly, I'm no potato expert and actually garden hundreds and hundreds of miles from the Snake River Plain and its basalt soil. In fact, the soil in my gardens is glacial till, granite and such (lots of granite and such ). I'm continually grabbing what I think is a spud and coming up with a rock .
There was something like 25 years when I never grew a potato. They were too cheap in the stores. It has been only the last few years that I've developed an interest in growing them again.
Here is what I understand to be the case: if you want small potatoes - plant a small potato and let it grow; if you want large potatoes - plant just 1 eye.
If you allow all the potato eyes to grow, the result will be many spuds but small size. My potatoes this year could have been larger if I'd only planted 6 pounds of seed, as I'd planned, instead of 10 pounds.
Yield may be about the same depending on soil fertility and available moisture. Oh and, some varieties like Kennebec and Yukon Gold are known for large potatoes. Fingerlings are at the other end of the spectrum.
Steve
There was something like 25 years when I never grew a potato. They were too cheap in the stores. It has been only the last few years that I've developed an interest in growing them again.
Here is what I understand to be the case: if you want small potatoes - plant a small potato and let it grow; if you want large potatoes - plant just 1 eye.
If you allow all the potato eyes to grow, the result will be many spuds but small size. My potatoes this year could have been larger if I'd only planted 6 pounds of seed, as I'd planned, instead of 10 pounds.
Yield may be about the same depending on soil fertility and available moisture. Oh and, some varieties like Kennebec and Yukon Gold are known for large potatoes. Fingerlings are at the other end of the spectrum.
Steve