Garden Journal, Starting The Potato Harvest At The Community Garden.

in #hive-1406352 years ago

Hello, hivers and garden lovers!

I finally started digging up the rows of potatoes in my garden plots at the local community garden. I planted 15 rows of potatoes last spring, each row being about 10 feet long, or about 3 meters. I had planted 5 rows of Adirondack Blue potatoes, 5 rows of early red potatoes, and 5 rows of Yukon Gold potatoes. I started digging at the end of the plot with the blue potatoes, simply because it was at one end of the plot.

This is my plot with the potatoes. This is actually a combined double plot, so it's about 45 feet long by 14 feet wide.

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This picture is from the other end of the plot.

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This is where I started digging.

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I dug up the first row of the blue potatoes. I ended up getting a few nice big potatoes, a lot of medium sized ones, and a fair amount of small and really small potatoes. It was a decent harvest for a 10 foot row.

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After digging up that row, I decided to dig up a row of red potatoes to see what kind of yield I would get from them. The amount of potatoes was pretty good, but I only got a few of what I would call big potatoes. Most of them were either medium size or small. Still, they're quite edible.

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I started the digging on Sept 29, I only dug 2 rows that day. My back doesn't like digging potatoes, one of the challenges of getting older.
I went back to the plots yesterday and dug up another 3 rows. So now, I have 3 rows of blue potatoes dug, and 2 rows of reds dug. The Yukon Golds were planted on the other end of the garden, so I'll probably get to them last. It doesn't really matter which rows I dig up first or last, as long as I get them all dug before it gets cold. Because the ground is dry on the surface right now, there's not much dirt to wipe from the potatoes, which helps with preparing them for storage for the winter. I'll talk about preparing the potatoes for storage, and how I store them in another post. I need to get some pictures first. 😊

That's all I have for this post, I hope you found it interesting!

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I can see how digging for the potatoes is an issue. It must put a lot of strain on your back. The potatoes look amazing. I can't wait to see the yield. And of course, they po-ta-toes, mash them, roast them, stick them in a stew. 🤣

Manually curated by brumest from the @qurator Team. Keep up the good work!

Love your work. Definitely back breaking - from the start of the post I was going - oh no, hope his back is okay! I'm terrible at growing potatoes, but I don't eat a lot of them so it's all good. STill, nothing better than homegrown, fresh potatoes!

That's a lot of potatoes, I saw those reddish one and it was imported where I live. They do make great staple food for winter and has long shelves time. I tried growing them but always failed, maybe I am just not good at it lol

Yes, this is the time as many root tubers and Stem tubers are harvested by this time. Over here in Ghana too, most of the yam leaves are dried so farmers have harvested paving way for the second formation of tubers.

Your potatoes have matured well. Thanks for the updates.

Wow, I love potatoes, and how I wish I could plant them in my garden too. I never saw other colors of potatoes before also do they taste the same?

I think the potatoes you harvest are great. if in my country there are potatoes that are smaller than the potatoes you harvested.