- Apr 15, 2008
- 1,960
- 83
- 341
I seem to remember a gardening show about potatoes. They put bone meal in when they planted them. The best crop of potatoes I've ever had were planted in somewhat sandy soil.
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
Arienwolf, haven't dug the sweet potatoes yet, will do that in a couple more weeks. If the wild riot of vines aboveground is any indication of what is underground, we should have sweets all winter!
Thanks for taking a look at my garden. I have paved walkways with bricks that cut it into beds and I plant flowers in it too to attract bees and make it pretty to look at. On the new potatoes, I had 2 small 2'x4' beds that I dug deep with a shovel. I composted heavily, tossed in a couple cups of lime and watered deeply. I think I planted 5 pounds of eyes. I got them at the feed store, cut them in pieces and laid on newspaper to cure. When the cut sides were brown and leathery, I planted them. I dug a trench about a foot deep and covered the eyes with about 6 inches of earth. As they grew, I filled in the trench. As they grew more, the vines were so thick and crowded, all I did was water them. The main thing is COMPOST COMPOST COMPOST!! And LOOSE soil!
You are on the right track with giving your chickens vegetable waste and letting them do the composting for you. You might want to expedite matters by raking leaves and putting them in the coop/run. My coop floor is dirt for that reason. Last winter I just kept adding more dry sawdust and leaves on top of the wet gooey mess and then I dug it out this spring.I dug down over a foot deep. PHEW! If you do this, be advised the buffalo gnats will be attracted to the smelly bottom layer. Scatter lime, I used pickling as hydrated will burn their feet, and rake it in. Let it dry good before putting more litter in. Also, spray your girls on the roost with vanilla, it will keep the gnats OFF them. Hang several vanilla scented Christmas tree auto air fresheners in the coop and it will help keep flies away. And the whole time you are digging out the poo/leaves/last month's scrap rejects, you can picture big beautiful potatoes grown in the finest smelly ol' poop you could dig for them!![]()