Where's the "taters in a bucket" thread?

tamlynn

Lovin' The Homestead
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I just wrote a blog post about this very topic.

http://tamlynnj.blogspot.com/2010/12/one-potato-two-potato.html

One potato, two potato

It all started with a gift from Miss Vickie. She's the lady who has the community garden plot across from ours, though I haven't seen her for months and her garden isn't looking so hot. Miss Vickie are you out there? Anyway, the kids were chatting with her (avoiding work) this summer while I was toiling away in our garden. Since my children are adorable she gave them a tiny little potato that had sprouted a cute little green leaf. It was a baby redskin, probably about an inch in diameter. I drove it home carefully and planted the slightly wilted thing in a pot. Before I knew it, the pot looked like this:
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I read somewhere that you are supposed to mound dirt around potatoes several times during the growing season and wait until the leaves die back before harvesting. But I didn't. So there. Just before we left on vacation (this would have been July) I dug my finger down into the dirt. There were potatoes in there! I felt as excited as the first time I went snorkeling in the ocean. I stuck my face in the water and gasped (mentally gasped because my face was in the water.) I had been playing in the ocean all that time and had no idea there were all those beautiful fish down there! I had been walking by that old pot for weeks, completely unaware of the beautiful tubers just beneath the surface. Harvest time.
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What is that, sixteen potatoes? And some good sized ones too. Homegrown potatoes are delicious, and obviously very easy. It didn't even matter that some bug was eating the leaves. I don't recommend using a terra cotta pot however, because it's too fragile to move around when dumping the potatoes. Go get yourself some cheap plastic containers- I like the black 15 gallon nursery pots. Fill with potting soil, put in a potato or two, place in a sunny spot and don't forget to water it once in a while. Before you know it you'll be baking, mashing, and french-frying.
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See that little tiny one at the top left? I replanted it. It's a circle of life kind of thing. Thanks, Miss Vickie.
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