I finished planting potatoes. 48 hills. A few red ones, and then the rest are German Butterball (new for me), Magic Molly (purple) and Elba.
I'm doing something new this year. I used to mark the hills with sticks. The sticks would fall over and I'd worry I was going to step on the baby plants trying to sprout.
I usually am up to my eyeballs with other things (canning) when the potato plants start dying off, and again, marking with sticks didn't work 100%. I leave the taters in the ground until September or so. They wait there just fine, as long as nothing down there starts eating them.
So, this year I am marking the hills with my janky, funky, old, bent tomato cages. The plant can grow up through it just fine. I will know where to dig. And, if I want to leave the cages over the winter, I'll know where I'm going to find volunteers. Because you never get all the potatoes when you dig them.
Right now, even though there are no potato sprouts up, I know exactly where the rows are.
I'm doing something new this year. I used to mark the hills with sticks. The sticks would fall over and I'd worry I was going to step on the baby plants trying to sprout.
I usually am up to my eyeballs with other things (canning) when the potato plants start dying off, and again, marking with sticks didn't work 100%. I leave the taters in the ground until September or so. They wait there just fine, as long as nothing down there starts eating them.
So, this year I am marking the hills with my janky, funky, old, bent tomato cages. The plant can grow up through it just fine. I will know where to dig. And, if I want to leave the cages over the winter, I'll know where I'm going to find volunteers. Because you never get all the potatoes when you dig them.
Right now, even though there are no potato sprouts up, I know exactly where the rows are.