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Or, I should say I grew potato PLANTS.
I didn't get around to starting the potato experiment until late in the summer, and the cool weather started killing the plants just as they were beginning to produce the potatos. But each container had over a dozen tiny potatos in it- if I had just gotten them in a few weeks earlier, I would have had a nice harvest.
This year I'm going to start them inside and set them out in early spring. The containers are small enough to carry back in the house if we get a late cold spell, and if they grow well I should be able to get 2 full harvests before the fall.
The plants did AMAZINGLY well in those small containers. By the time they flowered, they were 3-4 feet above the original seed-potato level. I had to make my containers taller by cutting the bottoms off of other containers, and sliding the remaining top over the plants to "stack" into the original buckets.
One area of the experiment was a failure that you all might want to know about.
That person who wrote that link used compost to cover his plants, and back when I was a kid I saw folks use straw.... So, in one container, I used cedar shavings. I figured they had similar covering properties to straw, but might also have the extra benefit of repelling insects.
It didn't work. For whatever reason, the plants in that container grew just as large but didn't produce a single potato.
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