Potatoes...
My dad would always take the remains of last year's potatoes, cut them
in halves and plant them. We always got lots of potatoes in the fall. Well, I don't have last years crop to plant in my new garden. To save the cost of buying planting tubers or seed, can I use the potatoes from the local supermarket? Have they been rendered sterile? |
Potatoes...
higgledy wrote:
My dad would always take the remains of last year's potatoes, cut them in halves and plant them. We always got lots of potatoes in the fall. Well, I don't have last years crop to plant in my new garden. To save the cost of buying planting tubers or seed, can I use the potatoes from the local supermarket? Have they been rendered sterile? You might have better luck in rec.gardens.edible |
Potatoes...
Thanks Janet. Especially on the seeds being tubers. Read seeds in the
catalogs and with my dad never buying potatoe tubers/seeds, never knew better. |
Potatoes...
higgledy wrote: To save the cost of buying planting tubers or seed, can I use the potatoes from the local supermarket? Have they been rendered sterile? Taters from the market have typically been treated with a chemical that inhibits sprouting. If you buy organic taters, though, they should sprout. Potatoes have viruses which collect in the tubers and decrease vigor with each generation. These viruses are transmitted through aphids. Certified "seed" are free of these viruses. If you grow out store-bought taters or those you grew yourself you may have more and more of these viruses with each generation and less and less vigor. this will depend on the presence of aphids. These viruses accumulate over time when taters are grown from non-certified seed. Certified "seed" can be grown in areas that are free from aphids. This is in locations way up north or at high altitude. The ancestral home of the potatoe is the high altitude region of Peru and Ecuador. Other certified "seed" is grown out in sterile culture (petri dishes) in a labratory in order to eliminate the viruses. This is how seed is certified and is why you might want to grow certified seed. Of course a lot of folks grow from saved tubers. results The qulity of your crop just may not neccesarily be consistent with the tubers that were planted. The decline in vigor may be a lot or it may be none. This depend on the presence of aphids during the grow out. You can use a landscape fabric like "Remay" to exclude aphids from yur spuds. In short, it is best to buy certified. If you want to grow a rare strain then certified may not be available. Next best is to grow out uncertified tubers that you produced yourself in which case you will have a better selection of varieties. After that, you might grow out some organically grown spuds which will be free of anti-sprouting chemicals. Lastly, supermarket taters are unsuitable for planting and should be tried only as an experiment and not if you are counting on a crop. |
Potatoes...
higgledy wrote: My dad would always take the remains of last year's potatoes, cut them in halves and plant them. We always got lots of potatoes in the fall. Well, I don't have last years crop to plant in my new garden. To save the cost of buying planting tubers or seed, can I use the potatoes from the local supermarket? Have they been rendered sterile? I bought my seed potatoes for 69 cents a lb. Kate |
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