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MW 08-01-2010 08:29 AM

sweet potato slips
 
What exactly are sweet potato slips?

And can you use supermarket bought sweet potatoes (once 'slipped') to
plant out to grown your own, rather than buying slips from seed
suppliers.


M

Bob Hobden 08-01-2010 12:40 PM

sweet potato slips
 


"MW" wrote
What exactly are sweet potato slips?


Rooted cuttings basically.
What I did was sit the sweet potato in a box with a thin layer of potting
compost on the bottom ( about 2.5cm) and place it somewhere light and
warmish (say 60°F) and they will sprout and then root. These are simply
pulled off the potatoes and potted on, the potatoes will then make more
slips.


And can you use supermarket bought sweet potatoes (once 'slipped') to
plant out to grown your own, rather than buying slips from seed
suppliers.

You can but they will be foreign grown ones and therefore not that suitable
for the UK with our short naff summers.
Even growing on my own slips early from small potatoes grown from bought
slips the previous year we still didn't get a usable crop. In this country
they need a good long sunny summer and plenty of water. BTW they are also
very susceptible to slug damage so if your normal spuds get problems with
slugs you won't get much of a sweet potato crop left even if you get that
far.
Perhaps in a big polytunnel they would be worthwhile.

--
Regards
Bob Hobden
W.of London. UK



MW 08-01-2010 03:24 PM

sweet potato slips
 
On Fri, 8 Jan 2010 12:40:08 -0000, "Bob Hobden"
wrote:

And can you use supermarket bought sweet potatoes (once 'slipped') to
plant out to grown your own, rather than buying slips from seed
suppliers.

You can but they will be foreign grown ones and therefore not that suitable
for the UK with our short naff summers.
Even growing on my own slips early from small potatoes grown from bought
slips the previous year we still didn't get a usable crop. In this country
they need a good long sunny summer and plenty of water. BTW they are also
very susceptible to slug damage so if your normal spuds get problems with
slugs you won't get much of a sweet potato crop left even if you get that
far.
Perhaps in a big polytunnel they would be worthwhile.


Thx for this. I might order some from Thompson & Morgan. They're doing
multi-variety packs at the mo.

We're in Essex and FWIW we do generally have a dry and reasonably
lengthy summer, so maybe less of a problem than elsewhere. And slugs
haven't really been problematic on our potatoes.

Just cooking a sweet potato, pepper and sweetcorn soup with
shop-bought ingredients, so hopefully can be making a fully homegrown
version next year.

What do you reckon about planting out time? Same as maincrop spuds?

M

[email protected] 08-01-2010 03:29 PM

sweet potato slips
 
In article ,
MW wrote:

Just cooking a sweet potato, pepper and sweetcorn soup with
shop-bought ingredients, so hopefully can be making a fully homegrown
version next year.


Don't bet on it.

What do you reckon about planting out time? Same as maincrop spuds?


They grow well in the UK only when planted under a blue moon.

More seriously, no. Do that and they will die. They MUST have warm
soil.


Regards,
Nick Maclaren.

Bob Hobden 08-01-2010 03:59 PM

sweet potato slips
 


.
MW wrote:

Just cooking a sweet potato, pepper and sweetcorn soup with
shop-bought ingredients, so hopefully can be making a fully homegrown
version next year.


Don't bet on it.

What do you reckon about planting out time? Same as maincrop spuds?


They grow well in the UK only when planted under a blue moon.

More seriously, no. Do that and they will die. They MUST have warm
soil.

Quite agree, from our experience they will only produce a crop under ideal
UK conditions which are very warm long summers with a good rainfall. In a
normal year a waste of time other than it's an interesting experience.

BTW the plants look like giant convolvulus and spread all over. If you
garden on an allotment site do warn any neighbouring gardeners or they might
think you are producing genetically modified bindweed to take over the
world. :-)

--
Regards
Bob Hobden
W.of London. UK



No Name 08-01-2010 05:19 PM

sweet potato slips
 
MW wrote:
Thx for this. I might order some from Thompson & Morgan. They're doing
multi-variety packs at the mo.


I got one of those 2 years ago. Instead of 3 varieties they sent 2 with
a double pack of one type, due to lack of supply. I was a bit miffed.

We're in Essex and FWIW we do generally have a dry and reasonably
lengthy summer, so maybe less of a problem than elsewhere. And slugs
haven't really been problematic on our potatoes.


We did ours in Essex. In hindsight, we should have given them more water.
We planted through black plastic and kept it on all season. Can't remember
when we put them out. Nick says we put them out May/June, but we should
have put them out earlier. They only grew to quite small and we didn't have
a massive crop.
I think we're going to try again this year.

What do you reckon about planting out time? Same as maincrop spuds?


Depends on how warm your soil is!

gardenlen[_2_] 08-01-2010 05:54 PM

sweet potato slips
 
g'day mw,

slips are vine cuttings or sections of vines.

and if supermarket tubers are viable that is they haven't been treated
not to sprout then they can be used.

see our presentation:

http://www.lensgarden.com.au/growing..._pineapple.htm

have fun

On Fri, 08 Jan 2010 08:29:45 +0000, MW wrote:

snipped
--

len

With peace and brightest of blessings,

"Be Content With What You Have And
May You Find Serenity and Tranquillity In
A World That You May Not Understand."

http://www.lensgarden.com.au/

Rusty Hinge[_2_] 08-01-2010 09:57 PM

sweet potato slips
 
wrote:

They grow well in the UK only when planted under a blue moon.


There's a blue moon this month - no idea whether it's the first full
moon or the second one thobut.

--
Rusty

Rusty Hinge[_2_] 08-01-2010 09:58 PM

sweet potato slips
 
Bob Hobden wrote:


.
MW wrote:

Just cooking a sweet potato, pepper and sweetcorn soup with
shop-bought ingredients, so hopefully can be making a fully homegrown
version next year.


Don't bet on it.

What do you reckon about planting out time? Same as maincrop spuds?


They grow well in the UK only when planted under a blue moon.

More seriously, no. Do that and they will die. They MUST have warm
soil.

Quite agree, from our experience they will only produce a crop under
ideal UK conditions which are very warm long summers with a good
rainfall. In a normal year a waste of time other than it's an
interesting experience.

BTW the plants look like giant convolvulus and spread all over. If you
garden on an allotment site do warn any neighbouring gardeners or they
might think you are producing genetically modified bindweed to take over
the world. :-)


I red somewhere that the greenery was edible.

--
Rusty

Pam Moore[_2_] 08-01-2010 10:07 PM

sweet potato slips
 
On Fri, 08 Jan 2010 21:58:56 +0000, Rusty Hinge
wrote:

Bob Hobden wrote:


.
MW wrote:

Just cooking a sweet potato, pepper and sweetcorn soup with
shop-bought ingredients, so hopefully can be making a fully homegrown
version next year.

Don't bet on it.

What do you reckon about planting out time? Same as maincrop spuds?

They grow well in the UK only when planted under a blue moon.

More seriously, no. Do that and they will die. They MUST have warm
soil.

Quite agree, from our experience they will only produce a crop under
ideal UK conditions which are very warm long summers with a good
rainfall. In a normal year a waste of time other than it's an
interesting experience.

BTW the plants look like giant convolvulus and spread all over. If you
garden on an allotment site do warn any neighbouring gardeners or they
might think you are producing genetically modified bindweed to take over
the world. :-)


I red somewhere that the greenery was edible.


You're right. I heard that too.

Pam in Bristol

Dave Hill 08-01-2010 10:23 PM

sweet potato slips
 
On 8 Jan, 22:07, Pam Moore wrote:
On Fri, 08 Jan 2010 21:58:56 +0000, Rusty Hinge





wrote:
Bob Hobden wrote:


.
MW * wrote:


Just cooking a sweet potato, pepper and sweetcorn soup with
shop-bought ingredients, so hopefully can be making a fully homegrown
version next year.


Don't bet on it.


What do you reckon about planting out time? Same as maincrop spuds?


They grow well in the UK only when planted under a blue moon.


More seriously, no. *Do that and they will die. *They MUST have warm
soil.


Quite agree, from our experience they will only produce a crop under
ideal UK conditions which are very warm long summers with a good
rainfall. In a normal year a waste of time other than it's an
interesting experience.


BTW the plants look like giant convolvulus and spread all over. If you
garden on an allotment site do warn any neighbouring gardeners or they
might think you are producing genetically modified bindweed to take over
the world. *:-)


I red somewhere that the greenery was edible.


You're right. *I heard that too.

Pam in Bristol- Hide quoted text -

- Show quoted text -



A blue Moon is the 2nd full moon in a single month.

K 08-01-2010 11:01 PM

sweet potato slips
 
Rusty Hinge writes
wrote:

They grow well in the UK only when planted under a blue moon.


There's a blue moon this month - no idea whether it's the first full
moon or the second one thobut.

There was one on New Year's Eve
--
Kay

MW 11-01-2010 11:57 AM

sweet potato slips
 
On 8 Jan 2010 17:19:11 GMT, wrote:

I think we're going to try again this year.

What do you reckon about planting out time? Same as maincrop spuds?


Depends on how warm your soil is!


Might get a spot warmed up in advance, and see how we get on. Nothing
ventured, nothing gained. Maybe experiment with a big tub in the
greenhouse.

M

Bob Hobden 11-01-2010 02:50 PM

sweet potato slips
 


"MW" wrote ...
wrote:

I think we're going to try again this year.

What do you reckon about planting out time? Same as maincrop spuds?


Depends on how warm your soil is!


Might get a spot warmed up in advance, and see how we get on. Nothing
ventured, nothing gained. Maybe experiment with a big tub in the
greenhouse.

Care, when I mentioned "bindweed to take over the world" I was not joking,
unless you have a commercial sized one you won't be able to get in your
greenhouse if they take off.

--
Regards
Bob Hobden
W.of London. UK


[email protected] 11-01-2010 02:57 PM

sweet potato slips
 
In article ,
Bob Hobden wrote:
"MW" wrote ...

Might get a spot warmed up in advance, and see how we get on. Nothing
ventured, nothing gained. Maybe experiment with a big tub in the
greenhouse.

Care, when I mentioned "bindweed to take over the world" I was not joking,
unless you have a commercial sized one you won't be able to get in your
greenhouse if they take off.


I recommend Ipomoea indica (learii) for that. Plant it out as things
warm up against a warm fence, and panic your neighbours :-) Its blue
flowers are very attractive, and it won't overwinter in most of the UK.

In our conservatory, it grows many 30' stems in a year, but that's
only because our summer is short.


Regards,
Nick Maclaren.

June Hughes[_2_] 11-01-2010 03:57 PM

sweet potato slips
 
In message ,
writes
In article ,
Bob Hobden wrote:
"MW" wrote ...

Might get a spot warmed up in advance, and see how we get on. Nothing
ventured, nothing gained. Maybe experiment with a big tub in the
greenhouse.

Care, when I mentioned "bindweed to take over the world" I was not joking,
unless you have a commercial sized one you won't be able to get in your
greenhouse if they take off.


I recommend Ipomoea indica (learii) for that. Plant it out as things
warm up against a warm fence, and panic your neighbours :-) Its blue
flowers are very attractive, and it won't overwinter in most of the UK.

I shall remember that. Our neighbours of some 26 years decided to erect
a 6 foot fence on each side of their garden in the summer and have the
whole thing apart from a small strip of lawn concreted and laid with
slabs. It looks like a prison exercise yard. To add insult to injury,
they threatened me with legal action if I didn't have a 70-year-old
conifer chopped down as its roots spread under their fence (its roots
were not wide) and for some reason they wanted to dig a 4 foot deep
trench into which to set the fence posts, which meant removing the
roots. If they had removed my roots on their side of the fence, the
tree would have become unstable fallen down. I hate them now and shall
never forgive them. Their 'builders' also chopped down a small, ancient
lilac tree in my garden, which wasn't doing any harm to anyone, without
our permission. Our beloved tortoise disappeared twice because their
stupid builders kept removing the logs I had put on my side of the fence
to stop him escaping. In the end, my neighbour on the other side let
him stay in her rabbit's pen in her garden until the 'builders' had gone
away, some three months later. My dog ended up several houses away on
one occasion too and we were without a fence for three months. I don't
know what will happen if they try to sell the house. An 80-foot long
yard is not attractive and it will cost someone a fortune to have all
the concrete removed. Still, that's their problem. At least we can't
see it and i can hide the fence behind many plants. I shall look out
for the learii (I have never heard of it before but it sounds a bit like
the morning glory I grew last year).

In our conservatory, it grows many 30' stems in a year, but that's
only because our summer is short.


Regards,
Nick Maclaren.


--
June Hughes

britjap 13-01-2010 11:17 AM

It's worth having a go - I hadn't read all the stuff about needing 20-30c, sandy soil etc so we grew 5 slips on heavy clay, open ground and no protection in the East Midlands (not exactly a warm spot). All five slips survived and we had usable potatoes from two of them, including a mammoth weighing nearly a pound. I would guess therefore that anyone giving a bit of protection and decent soil should get something out of it. Cheaper to buy in the shops, of course, but that's not anything like as much fun!


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