You're going to plant potatoes this year are you? No? Well you should. Potatoes are an easy crop to grow and they have the added bonus of growing out of sight so they're always a fun surprise when you dig them up. Potato harvest day is like the best Christmas morning ever because all your gifts are made out of carbs.
If you're looking for the short version of how to plant potatoes, I'll save you from reading through this whole post. Throw them in the ground.
If, however you like a bit of information with your information follow along.
First on the list of crap you have to know about potatoes, is you're going to be planting something called "seed potatoes". That's what potatoes grow from.
Table of Contents
What are seed potatoes you ask!
Seed potatoes are potatoes. That's all. They're just potatoes. What makes them the thing you want to plant with as opposed to some potato you found on the road that's fallen off the back of a garbage truck is seed potatoes are guaranteed to be disease free.
They're sometimes grown in a special location (on top of a hill that's at a higher elevation than the surrounding area) to help prevent any disease from getting on them. You buy them in a bag just like you do regular potatoes, but these potatoes have been sitting around since last year and are a bit wrinkly and just ready to sprout.
So a seed potato is a disease free potato that's about to sprout. Got it?
Below you can see a sprouted potatoes that's starting to grow tiny potatoes.
I've often used my potatoes from the previous year as my seed potatoes, but try to buy new stock every couple of years. THIS was one of those years.
I have really edited the types that I grow to the ones I love the most: Kennebec, and Burbank Russet. If I can find some this year I'd also like to plant Amarosa again (a pink potato that's very buttery and delicious).
I plant at least one full 3x16' bed with potatoes. That means I need 45 seed potatoes. OR DO I???
I do not. Because as it turns out you can turn 1 seed potato into 2 or 3 easily - thereby doubling or tripling your seed potato stock in a matter of minutes.
How?
By chopping them in half. Or thirds. Or even quarters.
You just have to make sure each piece of potato has at least 1 eye. I prefer to leave 2-3 eyes in each section but that's not completely necessary, it's just a good practice.
You can see the amount of eyes your average seed potato has. A LOT. You can see 6 eyes on this side of the potato alone. Just two more and it would be a spider.
So how do you cut them? Any way you can that keeps the eyes.
You don't have to cut straight across. To get 3 eyes on each half of this potato, I cut it in a bit of a zig zag.
Once the potatoes are cut you're supposed to let them dry out until the cut area gets leathery. This heals the wound and makes it way less likely for the potato to rot or get disease.
HOWEVER - having said that, there are plenty of people who throw the potatoes in the ground without drying them at all.
I'm a staunch rule breaker in general but not when it comes to the important things in life, like potatoes.
So I let my cut potatoes dry out and get leathery before planting them. Which is the perfect time to chit them.
What the stink is chitting potatoes?
Chitting potatoes is just giving them a bit of a head start on growing. I'm sure you've pulled a potato out of your drawer, bag or bin at home only to be confronted by a soft brown thing with long tentacles reaching out to grab you.
Your potato sprouted. That's what chitting is. You're encouraging your potato to sprout by giving it heat and light.
If you chit your potatoes before planting them you will get to harvest them earlier.
Just lay them on a screen so they get air underneath or pop them into an old egg carton and put them near light to encourage sprouting. You want the eyes of the potatoes to start to grow, but you don't want them to be SO sprouted that the sprouts break when you plant them. 1-2 cm long sprouts is ideal for planting.
You can chit potatoes whole seed potatoes or ones that you've cut to increase your stock.
This year I read about dipping them into wood ash to help them heal and dry more quickly so I gave that a shot just for fun.
I don't really think this is going to have any impact on my potatoes at all, but if you're cutting your seed potatoes and planting them in the same day it'd be a good, quick way to dry them out and protect them before shoving them into the dirt.
UPDATE: The wood ash had no impact and I won't do it again. As long as you let your cut potatoes dry before planting there's no need to do it.
After a couple of weeks the potatoes will be leathery, dry, sprouted and ready to plant.
When to plant potatoes
2-4 weeks before your last frost date.
The last frost date for my zone 6b garden is predicted as May 10th. That makes my potato planting dates from April 10th - May 1st.
Pests
Colorado potato beetles are the big issue in my garden. They're a big issue with potato growers in general.
These beetles which lay larvae on the underside of potato leaves, hatch out and go through several larvae instars getting bigger and bigger.
Keep an eye out for potato beetle larvae on your potato plants and hand pick them off as soon as you see them. Just stomp on them or throw them in a bucket of water.
Colorado potato beetles have two of the worst qualities in a bug. They can eat an entire plant overnight AND they're super sexual. Like, they're always doing it. Always. If you hear a Colorado potato beetle humming Barry White, you're done for. You will never get rid of them.
So are you going to plant them in potato towers?
No. Forget everything you've read about potato towers. They don't get you any more potatoes than you would get if you planted them in the ground or in straw. That's speaking from experience and ... well, just logic.
Potatoes don't produce huge crops because you happen to plant them in something 4' high. A seed potato will only produce so many potatoes over a season no matter what. Planting them in something called a tower doesn't change that.
Having said that you're going to find plenty of posts, people and hucksters and genuine fans of potato towers.
How to plant seed potatoes
At the most basic level you stick them in the ground. 8" - 10" deep is best.
I don't generally "hill" my potatoes. Hilling is when you plant your potatoes and pile more soil on the plants once they've reached about 1' high. You do this a couple of times in a season. The logic is that potatoes grow upwards and hilling them gives more room for potatoes to grow - similar to the theory of a potato tower but not as extreme.
I've never noticed any huge difference in my harvest from hilling so I don't do it, but hilling is a scientifically proven method to increase your harvest a bit.
I do however, plant my potatoes fairly deep at around 8-10".
The trench method
Dig an 8" deep trench and drop the potatoes in 1' apart, with the eyes facing up. Pull some soil back over the potatoes so they're covered by a few inches and wait for them to sprout. When they do, cover them with more soil, and so on over the course of the summer until the trench is filled back in.
In the past few years, I've developed a different method that's been working well.
The hole method
I loosen the soil a bit with a garden fork (no turning it over, just shove the fork in, lift it a tiny bit and then slide the fork right back out the way you put it in.) Once I've aerated the soil, I take a 2" x 2" wood stake, shovel handle or a piece of plastic pipe and push it into the soil as deep as I can at 1' intervals.
I swirl the stake around a few times to make the hole bigger.
Drop the piece of seed potato in the hole and knock some soil into it. Over the course of the growing season the hole just fills itself in. If it doesn't I just rake it in.
Seed potatoes that have been cut work best for this method because they're smaller than a whole potato & slip into the hole easily. The hole will be wider at the top and narrower at the bottom so you need a potato that will fit all the way down until it touches the soil at the bottom.
The shovel method
Probably the easiest way I've ever planted potatoes with the least amount of soil disturbance. Slide a shovel with a long blade (8" - 10") into the ground and wiggle it a bit to create a pocket. If the soil is wet the soil will stay put and you can slide your shovel out and drop the potato in and push it to the bottom of your hole.
If the soil is dry, keep your shovel in the ground with it pushing back the soil. Then slide the potato in with your hand to the bottom.
A few inches of soil will fall back in on itself. As the potatoes grow you can pull more soil over if you need to, but it usually just falls back in naturally.
Growing potatoes
Throughout the season if you're going to hill your potatoes then hill them. If you don't hill, check to make sure none are showing above soil level or they'll turn green. If potatoes are peeking out, just cover them with some soil.
Watch out for the number one threat to potatoes, the Colorado Potato Beetle. When you see them pick them off by hand and either step on them or throw them in a bucket of water. Either way it's gross.
After the potato plants have flowered cut back on their watering. Yes they need some water to live, but don't water them as regularly as you would during the vegetative stage. This drying out period will help the potato to toughen up.
How and when to harvest potatoes
When you'll be harvesting your potatoes will be dictated by what of the 3 kinds you planted. There are early, mid and late season varieties.
Early season potatoes can be harvested 60-80 days after planting.
Mid season potatoes can be harvested 80-95 days after planting.
Late season potatoes can be harvested beyond 95 days. Anything from 100-130.
Early Season Potato Varieties
Norland
Red Pontiac
Alta Rose
Irish Cobbler
Mid Season Potato Varieties
Yukon Gold
Chiefton
Late Season Potato Varieties
Amarosa
Kennebec
German Butterball
French Fingerling
Pink Fir
Russian Blue
Burbank Russet
Harvest your potatoes when their vines die back. This means they're done growing and have started curing and hardening up.
To harvest use a shovel or a fork to loosen the soil around the potato plant. If your soil is loose enough some varieties let you pull the entire plant up with all the potatoes still attached. Chiefton Red is especially good for this method.
Other potatoes aren't as cooperative and you need to dig through the soil with your hands or shovel them out. If you shovel, no matter how hard you try you're going to slice a few potatoes in half. Don't worry about it. You get to eat those potatoes first. Any sliced or damaged potatoes should be eaten first because they won't store long term well.
Curing potatoes
Once the potatoes are harvested you have to berate them. Call them names. Put a reindeer hat on them and post it on Instagram. Do whatever you need to do for them to ensure they develop a thick skin.
- Leave the newly dug potatoes outside for a couple of hours to dry out.
- Then keep them in a dark, humid area that's between 7 C - 16 C ( 45 F - 60 F ) for 2 weeks. This will cure them. Curing the potato toughens their skin so it doesn't scrape off and it retains the moisture in them. These two things will help guarantee your potatoes will last months in storage.
You'll never got those conditions exactly so don't worry. Just get as close as you can to that. You might store them outside on your porch, or inside. Whichever fits the criteria for curing best.
Storing potatoes
Ideal storage conditions for potatoes are 40 F in an area with 90% humidity. So how do you do that?
I have an unheated mudroom that I store my potatoes in. I keep the room as close to 40 as I can by using a space heater and have them in wicker baskets or slatted wooden boxes in a closed cupboard which keeps them both dark and helps maintain humidity.
Other possible places for storing homegrown potatoes are:
- Unheated closets
- Garage
- Shed
- A deep hole in the ground
- The back of a kitchen cupboard that's on an outside wall
I have a whole post on long term storage for common vegetables like carrots, squash and onions here.
Or, like I said earlier. Just throw them in the ground and wait for carb Christmas.
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Emily Cherry
Thank you! I have NO idea what kind of potatoes I'm growing, because the seed bits were apparently hiding in my compost (much love to the composting articles here as well!) But at least I have a basic idea of when to dig for my carb surprises, and what to do with them once I have them in the bright light of day. Also, once we figured out what the weird plant that showed up in the middle of my newly created flowerbed was, we added our sweet potato slips (yay, the sweet potato post!), and they are enjoying Potato Paradise right along with their cousins.
TL:DR - Karen, my children are terribly grateful for all your gardening posts, because "don't pull that, it might have flowers!" has now turned into a whole bed of flowering plants that we can eat, too. And I can feel like the best Mama, because you gave me all the right knowledge to make this work. Much love from the Cherrys! 💕💕💕
Karen
It looks like there are sweet potatoes in there! ~ karen
Emily Cherry
There are! Also, after poking at the dirt a bit, I saw some "baby" potatoes (picture attached), and it looks like the Potato Fairy has blessed us with Russian Blues. Or, something has gone terribly wrong. 🤷
Karen
Look at them all in a row! That's quite amazing to see. ~ karen!
Jody
Do you put wood ash from your fireplace or pizza oven in your community garden? If you do, does it make a difference?
Karen
Hey Jody. I've never actually been bothered to. I have actually, a couple of times, but very half heartedly. Wood ash is excellent for changing the pH of soil but I've haven't done enough research into any other nutritional etc. benefits. ~ karen!
Hettie
Thanks, Karen! I've marked my calendar for two weeks before my last frost to get my "tatties" (Scottish mum's word for potatoes) in the ground. You are the person who inspired me many years ago to begin growing vegetables. For that, I will forever be in your debt. I love my vegetable garden! So far, potato beetles haven't been a problem (touch wood!), but I have a terrible vole problem. They go after everything I plant underground. They especially love beets, carrots and sweet potatoes. Any suggestions for deterring them?
Karen
Hi Hettie. I have vole problems as well so I can empathize. In a lot of cases I've found insect netting with wood boards or something similar holding it down is enough to deter voles. You can even cover your crop with row cover and then plant a trap crop of nearby. (just a bunch of easily accessible beets and carrots you're willing to sacrifice for the sake of your other netted crop. Always implement several different methods when you're trying to eliminate a pest or disease. ~ karen!
Hettie
Thanks so much for this clever advice, Karen. I'm going to try it and I'll let you know how it goes. Have a great gardening season!
Karen
And I'm very proud to have been your vegetable gardening inspiration. ~ karen!
Hettie
:) It's true!
Helen Whaley
In England I looked forward early in the year to new potatoes. Small, with flaky papery skins.
Is there an equivalent in North America?
Karen
Hi Helen! Yes, yes, we have new potatoes too. :) They're super creamy and delicious just boiled, with butter and dill or mint. ~ karen!
Jane
I stopped growing potatoes in my raised beds because of earth worms: they seem to like going through the new potatoes. On the other hand, they grow vigorously in my compost barrels. 😀I just throw the sprouted potatoes in and they grow. The sweet potatoes are grown in half barrels sitting about 2 feet above ground and no critters get to them at all.
Karen
Yep. Big pots or barrels is the only way to grow sweet potatoes. ~ karen!