Taters in a Barrel
How to grow potatoes in a barrel for simple harvesting
Peggy M. Mills tells us how she grows her...
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The Humble Spud
December/January 1994
Issue # 147 - December/January 1995
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Remember what potatoes used to taste like . . . hot and
steaming from the oven, full of fluffy white meal, and with an
earthy flavor that didn't need the help of butter or
sour cream? Well, you can raise your own spuds and recapture that
special flavor, and you won't have to do a lot of backbreaking
digging, either. You can do what I do and grow taters in a
barrel. . . and what's more, that container is filled with
sawdust. Yep, you heard me right, sawdust! Here's how it's
done:
First, get yourself a barrel. You can use an old metal or
plastic trash can, or even a discarded whiskey keg. However, the
size of the container will determine the number of "earth apples"
you'll harvest, so make your selection accordingly. To prepare
your growin' bin, poke a series of holes-spaced about six inches
in each direction-in the bottom of the container. The drainage
provided by the bores will help keep your spuds' "feet" dry ...
an important consideration. Then spread a sheet of fiberglass
screening over the holes, and put about six inches of soil in the
bottom of the barrel. Next comes a four-inch layer of sawdust . .
. and-with that in place-you're ready to plant the seed
potatoes.
As you probably know, spuds-unlike most vegetables-aren't
usually raised from seed. Instead, they're sprouted from the eyes
of fully grown tubers . . . known as seed potatoes. So, if you
grew your own crop of taters last year and set some of the bumpy
beauties aside, you're ahead of the game. If not, don't worry:
There are commercial vendors of certified seed potatoes listed at
the end of this article. (There's one source to avoid, however:
store-bought spuds, even If they are beginning to sprout. The
commercial edibles have usually been sprayed with an
antisprouting chemical . . . and even the ones that do put forth
new growth will develop poorly.)
Slice your seed potatoes so that each chunk contains two eyes,
and let the severed spuds sit for a day or two while their cut
surfaces dry. Next, take the "seeds" and push 'em down into the
layer of saw dust in the barrel . . . just far enough so they're
covered. Now dampen the tree shavin's and stand back. In only a
few days you'll find little plants sproutin' through the sawdust.
Then, each time these young'uns grow a couple of inches above the
woodwaste, dump in another load to cover 'em up, and
give the crop a soaking. Since the new potatoes form
above their parent eye, you are-in effect-creating room
for more down-home delicacies each time you bury the plant! By
the time the container is full, you'll have two or three feet of
barrelgrown beauties to harvest.