I have just been looking at getting some Sweet Potato plants. Has anyone ever grown them? and how did they turn out?
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Hi Mark, I've tried twice with zero success.............I'm not even tempting 3rd time lucky.sigpic“Gorillas are very intelligent, but they don't have to be as delicate as chimps -- they can just smash open the termite nest,”
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I brought a sweet potato plant from b&q last year, I re potted it into a large bin and kept it in a blowaway greenhouse(the 4 shelf kind) in a really sunny sheltered spot. By the end of summer I had about 6 sweet potatoes. I've put one of them in the kitchen window to try and grow slips for growing this year and I have 2 little purple spruts so far
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I grew some last year. They were reduced at B&Q late on so did not get as long in the ground as they would have liked. I grew them in a container, with a black plastic cover over the soil, and a homemage cloche. This was my crop.
Decent considering they were two months short on growth time. But it was a very warm summer, so that helped. They need it to be hot!
I dont plan on growing them this year, not enough of a return for the space.Attached Files
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I can't remember where I read this but the info said to buy sweet potatoes from supermarket (ones to eat). You then cut them in half and put them cut side down in a tray of water. after a while they will send out little sprouts which you then remove and plant. They need keeping warm. Not tried this but will do when I get my heated greenhouse.
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Originally posted by MarkHackwell View PostI have just been looking at getting some Sweet Potato plants. Has anyone ever grown them? and how did they turn out?
Originally posted by Kitchen Gardener View PostI can't remember where I read this but the info said to buy sweet potatoes from supermarket (ones to eat). You then cut them in half and put them cut side down in a tray of water. after a while they will send out little sprouts which you then remove and plant. They need keeping warm.
Downside with supermarket ones is that they have sometimes/often? been treated with chemicals to stop them sprouting, so it can take months before they shoot. Shouldn't be a problem if starting now though
I grew mine in the greenhouse, and I'm a bit sceptical that they will do much outside.K's Garden blog the story of the creation of our garden
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Tryin g them for the first time this year. Bought some organic ones in winter and kept them warm, it took a long time but then sprouted. I have at least 8 slips in small pots and will put them in black buckets in un heated green house in a couple of weeks. I read an article in mother nature about growing in northern climate which was interestinggoddess
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Last year I grew sweet potato (I think ‘Georgia Jet’?) in a black polythene potato planter in the corner of the greenhouse. It grew like a weed and was given a serious amount of TLC given the supposed difficulty in getting them to grow well.
"Pah", I thought. "Beginners luck maybe", I mused. "But look at this thing. It's HUGE and loves it here!". The foliage finally died back and I was super excited. I even waited for a warm day to harvest so I could start the curing process for my bountiful crop.
Most. Disappointing. Crop. Ever.
Combining the roots I harvested I probably had a single mid sized potato.
I am not trying again this year. 2 more greenhouse toms have taken the space.Last edited by Valleyman; 26-05-2015, 04:02 PM.
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I sprouted a supermarket sweet potato in a glass of water last january, and planted out some of the slips in the soil left behind by my early potatoes in late June. I dug them up when I cleared the rest of the bed for the winter. And behold! We had a few smallish sweet potatoes! In no way a good harvest, but I think we were pretty late with everything (sprouting, planting out), so I wasn't expecting much. All in all, we got about a pound and a half from two small plants.
This year, I started the sprouting process in December, and I've now got four smallish plants in pots in the greenhouse. They'll go out once the nights are a bit warmer.
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