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potato plants falling over!!
5 posters
Page 1 of 1
potato plants falling over!!
Hi everyone me AGAIN. My potato plants are about 2.5 ft tall and I've hilled them up to about 10" to 12" of soil and now the plants are falling over. I been researching and some people say keep hilling and some say its normal to let them fall. Anybody deal with this ? I have them in raised beds with mels mix and anymore hilling will be going way over the boxes top. I've filled them to the rim with soil. Is this normal? I also read that when they fall over and die out is when you harvest but I didn't think it would be this soon. Do they harvest that soon? Sorry if I ask too many questions im new to gardening and a bit of a worrier.... Lol Thanks for any and all help!!
jennfinn1986- Posts : 9
Join date : 2014-05-12
Location : valleyhead, AL
Re: potato plants falling over!!
Also the leaves at bottom are yellowing as they are falling over??
jennfinn1986- Posts : 9
Join date : 2014-05-12
Location : valleyhead, AL
Potato ideas...
Wish I could help...but can just make guesses...I would agree that they need to be hilled higher..any way you can add some extra height to your boxes? I think yellowing leaves may be normal, as the plant ages, they do tend to yellow a bit at the bottom. Have they flowered yet?
Dara- Posts : 12
Join date : 2014-03-03
Location : Newton, Iowa; zone 4B-5A
Re: potato plants falling over!!
Yes they have a lot of flowers
jennfinn1986- Posts : 9
Join date : 2014-05-12
Location : valleyhead, AL
Want a treat??
Depending on the variety...when they flower, there should be tiny little baby taters down there! If you like baby potatoes (especially delicious creamed with new peas)..go ahead and snitch some! Browned in butter until the skin is crunchy...
Unless you can hill them deeper, I guess you go with what you have. Once the flowers dry and the vines all begin to yellow, then sneak down under one hill and see what you have. Not sure in your climate when you normally harvest, but in my zone 5, I leave them until just before frost so they can get nice and big!
Unless you can hill them deeper, I guess you go with what you have. Once the flowers dry and the vines all begin to yellow, then sneak down under one hill and see what you have. Not sure in your climate when you normally harvest, but in my zone 5, I leave them until just before frost so they can get nice and big!
Dara- Posts : 12
Join date : 2014-03-03
Location : Newton, Iowa; zone 4B-5A
Re: potato plants falling over!!
If the potato tubers are well covered with MM and the only problem is the foliage falling over I would suggest simply support the foliage. Place stakes in the corners of the bed and then use string tied at a foot above the ground, then run the string from stake to stake and corral the foliage.
43 years a gardener and going strong with SFG.
https://squarefoot.forumotion.com/t3574-the-end-of-july-7-weeks-until-frost
There are certain pursuits which, if not wholly poetic and true, do at least suggest a nobler and finer relation to nature than we know. The keeping of bees, for instance. ~ Henry David Thoreau
https://squarefoot.forumotion.com/t1306-other-gardening-books
Potato plants falling over
First your potato plants flower (gusty winds blew most of mine off this year). Then the plants begin to die. Once the plants are dead, wait two more weeks and then harvest your potatoes. Don't water two weeks before harvesting. My potato plants are still in the process of dying, so I dug two, Yukon Gold potatoes out from beneath the first plant that died - all that's left is the stem. It was raining, so I was just testing to see if there were potatoes down there. YEP! They were beautiful. My red potatoes aren't ready yet, just the Yukon Gold. I'm going to harvest mine in order of the plants dying. Unless I start finding mushy ones, I'm going to harvest them as I use them to keep them from going bad; since people keep theirs in root cellars anyway.
Rahab222- Posts : 95
Join date : 2013-03-28
Location : Houston TX
Re: potato plants falling over!!
camprn wrote:If the potato tubers are well covered with MM and the only problem is the foliage falling over I would suggest simply support the foliage. Place stakes in the corners of the bed and then use string tied at a foot above the ground, then run the string from stake to stake and corral the foliage.
I've also had good luck with using a large tomato cage - cutting off the bottom ring for more width overall - fits into a 1x1 square and did a good job with support.
kensadams- Posts : 14
Join date : 2014-05-13
Location : Groton, MA
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