Potato Success

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After 10 weeks of waiting, not so patiently, I discovered on Wednesday that my potato plants had finally topped the wheat straw! I seriously thought those potatoes had rotted long ago and that I was stuck with an expensive experiment. Looks like I was wrong, thankfully.

I got the seed potatoes from Wood Praire Farms in Maine. They shipped them to me in November, at my request, back when I thought we were going to have access to a garden spot at church for the homeschool co-op kids. When that idea fell through, I sat them on my clothes dryer for a couple of weeks until most all of the potatoes had a little sprouting going on, and then I spread them out in the raised beds and covered them with wheat straw.

Nothing, nothing and more nothing. They did not sprout, they did not send up shoots. They laid there and whispered failure into my ear.

And now, a week after spring officially began, I have a sweet story to tell, about my impatience and the need to back off the performance-based farming approach I have been using. ADD farming is what I call it. And it doesn't promote a wait-and -see mentality, if you know what I mean.

Oh, potato varieties: Yukon Gold, Caribe, and Onaway. All three are up. The Yukons are the slowest but I am not complaining any more. Really.

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Recent Reader Comments

MaryAnn commented:

It looks like yet one more use for a shovle.

naturalpaths commented:

Too cute! I've enjoyed catching up with all your farm happenings. I miss your homestead blog.


Larry Holcomb commented:

Mike
Thanks for the mention. It looks like you have figured out the instructions. You are are making progress. It should get easier from here. And all you like is finishing. Tell Denise I'm ready for the 1 pound of butter when she gets it made. I have found a way to agitate the cream. I'll just care it around in my dump truck all day
Larry H.

Mrs T commented:

Tim has 5 wonderful handsome brothers and one precious beautiful sis.

I'm proud to be part of the family!


Love you Tim!!

Lynne commented:

Thanks for the update and the photos! The plans are very exciting. I am looking forward to enjoying some of those wonderful blackberries and garlic with you this year.

Blessings,

Lynne

Burns Best Farm commented:

We shopped the removal around quite a bit to find a lower price, and part of the deal we got with the company that did finally take it down involved them removing all the wood. They were able to sell it somewhere to offset their removal costs. We kept some of the smaller branches to use as firewood this winter. Mike is planning to seed the spot where the stump was removed soon.

About this Entry

This page contains a single entry by Mike Burns published on March 28, 2007 12:13 AM.

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T-Minus 21 Days.... is the next entry in this journal.

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